Streaming The Dukes of Hazzard - The Complete Sixth Season Online
août 5th, 2010 by gilbert3088333![]() |
Streaming The Dukes of Hazzard - The Complete Sixth Season Online.
Movie Title: The Dukes of Hazzard - The Complete Sixth Season The Dukes of Hazzard - The Complete Sixth Season is available for streaming or downloading. Click Here to Stream or Download The Dukes of Hazzard - The Complete Sixth Season |
Well what can I say “The Dukes Of Hazzard” Rules. I always wanted to have the complete 145 episodes and now I am so end to have them all with only the Seventh season left to be released.
Buy,Download, Or Stream The Dukes of Hazzard - The Complete Sixth Season! Click Here
Somthing changed for The General Lee in Season Six which is the exhaust of miniatures for the stunt sequences, instead of real cars allowing “The General Lee” to waft even higher even though it did not seek exactly like the sincere thing, but I like it due to the fact that the “Chargers” are satisfactory from destruction
The ratings improved over the previous season, but not to same level the series had enjoyed before the walkout of Schneider and Wopat.
Buy,Download, Or Stream The Dukes of Hazzard - The Complete Sixth Season! Click Here
The regular cast for season Six are:
John Schneider (Bo Duke)
Tom Wopat (Luke Duke)
Catherine Bach (Daisy Duke)
Denver Pyle (Uncle Jesse Duke)
Ben Jones (Cooter Davenport)
Sonny Shroyer (Enos Strate)
Sorrell Booke (Boss Jefferson Davis Hogg)
James Best (Sheriff Rosco P. Coltrane)
All 22 episodes (Including a two parts episode) are listed below:
107- Lulu’s Gone Away - Aired 9/23/1983
108- A Baby for the Dukes - Aired 9/30/1983
109- Too Many Roscos - Aired 10/7/1983
110- Brotherly Adore - Aired 10/14/1983
111- The Boar’s Nest Bears - Aired 10/21/1983
112- Boss Late Bars - Aired 11/4/1983
113- A Boy’s Best Friend - Aired 11/11/1983
114- Targets: Daisy and Lulu - Aired 11/18/1983
115- Twin Misfortune - Aired 11/25/1983
116- Enos’s Last Chance - Aired 12/2/1983
117- High Flyin’ Dukes - Aired 12/9/1983
118- Cooter’s Girl - Aired 12/20/1983
119- Heiress Daisy Duke - Aired 1/6/1984
120- Boring and Alive - Aired 1/20/1984
121- Play It Again, Luke - Aired 1/27/1984
122&123-Undercover Dukes - Aired (Part1) -2/3/84 (Part2) -2/10/84
124- How to Succeed in Hazzard - Aired 2/17/1984
125- Conclude Call for Daisy - Aired 2/24/1984
126- The Ransom of Hazzard County - Aired 3/2/1984
127- The Fortune Tellers - Aired 3/23/1984
128- Cooter’s Confession - Aired 3/24/1984
I composed can’t own that I am only 17 episodes away from having the elephantine 145 episodes collection.
Thank you for reading my review.
When John Schneider and Tom Wopat walked off “The Dukes of Hazzard” at the begin of the show’s fifth season over a bid with Warner Brothers, many idea the point to would never recover. Schneider and Wopat were replaced by two actors (Byron Cherry and Christopher Mayer) who were forced to basically imitate the characters of Bo and Luke Duke, without making their possess heed. The expose marched on, and though it appeared to lose some of its luster, all that changed when Schneider and Wopat returned slow in the fifth season for a royal Hazzard homecoming.
One of the disputes Schneider and Wopat were having with Warner was the lack of innovative or unusual scripts, and it appears that the writers took this into consideration when creating this, the sixth season, of “The Dukes of Hazzard.” Several of the episodes deal with more archaic topics (well, as obsolete as the “Dukes” explain goes!), like ‘A Boy’s Best Friend,’ which centers around the Duke boys coming to the help of an orphan boy; ‘Brotherly Admire,’ which chronicles the return of Luke’s long lost baby brother; ‘Cooter’s Girl,’ where the character played by Ben Jones meets his estranged daughter; or ‘The Boar’s Nest Bears,’ where a boy who unprejudiced lost his father is comforted by the Duke family through a helpful used fashion basketball tournament, albeit with the interference of Boss Hogg.
I dare say that a few of the episodes are downright suspenseful and edgier, most notably ‘Enos’s Last Chance,’ where Sonny Shroyer’s character is chased down by a hit man curved on revenge on the Hazzard deputy. (This is one of my most popular episodes of the entire bustle of “The Dukes of Hazzard.”) This season also produces one of those classic ’80s 2-part episodes built around a broad storyline in ‘Undercover Dukes,’ which is surely one of the most creative and inviting episodes of the entire series rush, most likely due to the tension that is played out within the Duke family during this episode. Then there is ‘Play It Again, Luke,” where Luke’s stale girlfriend, now a rising singer, returns to Hazzard as her manager tries to cash in on her life-insurance policy.
A discussion on season six of this series wouldn’t be complete without mentioning the classic episode ‘Two Many Rosco’s,’ where James Best plays a dual role and shows off some of his weak dramatic acting skills. And longtime cast member Peggy Rea returns as Lulu Hogg in ‘Lulu’s Gone Away,’ where Sorrel Booke’s character of Boss Hogg continues to shine in an episode that shows both Boss Hogg’s softer side and grittier side while trying to salvage the kidnappers who abducted her.
All these shows detached fill all of the lighthearted antics of Boss Hogg and Rosco (who are funnier and cleverer than ever in this season), the warm and down-home charm of Uncle Jesse (played by Denver Pyle) and the sultry sexiness of Catherine Bach, who is peaceful wearing her ‘Daisy Duke’ shorts during these late-era “Dukes” seasons.
It is astounding to eye how well the present continued into its sixth season (not to mention rebounding from the overhauled fifth season), and a lot of the episodes found here are incredibly fresher and better written than some of the episodes found in earlier seasons. This season of “The Dukes of Hazzard” ranks up there with the best of them all, and is highly recommended. A large thanks to Warner Brothers for releasing this series in a timely fashion and treating it with the respect it deserves. They don’t accomplish pleasurable, wholesome family fun shows like this anymore!
Bonus features for this season release feature Ben Jones (Cooter) and Sonny Shroyer (Enos) in a tour of the unique Hazzard County, which was actually Covington, Georgia, where the first episodes of the series were originally filmed, and a special documentary on the Dukes’ renowned car, the General Lee.
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