Product Details
- Encoding: All Regions
- Format: Color
- Aspect Ratio(s): 1.33:1
- Audio Encoding: Dolby Digital 2.0
- Rated: NR
- Studio: Cerebellum Corp.
- DVD Release Date: October 5, 1999
- Run Time: 81
- ASIN: 1581983107
- Average Customer Review:
Based on 11 reviews.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
If you're looking to really learn the French
language, as opposed to briefly memorizing a few phrases to help you find a
bathroom or complain to the doctor of your traveler's stomach, the Standard
Deviants have the video for you. Their French, Part I is a language
lesson for the MTV generation. Short segments, funky graphics, and personable,
youthful teachers make watching this tape entertaining, rather like Sesame
Street for grownups. Using the "functional approach," making sure people can
communicate and accomplish tasks in the new language, the video introduces
French with phrases and full sentences, presenting ideas through demonstration.
The point is to help you think in French. Dialogue is clearly transcribed on the
screen, so you can see what the words look like, and two cards included with the
tape give translations of some of the dialogues and useful vocabulary. Note,
though, that all of the explanations are given in English, as opposed to an
immersion program (meaning all in French, including explanations) such as
French in Action. Which style works best is purely a matter of personal
preference. Skits put the conversations into context and provide levity. Yet, as
is clearly stated in the beginning of the lesson, this series is intended to be
a supplement to a class, and French really needs to be practiced through
speaking and writing. The benefit, though, of video is you can rewind as much as
needed to master pronunciation and to let the concepts sink in. The tape opens
with pronunciation, with close-ups of faces as they pronounce the alphabet to
help you learn how to shape your mouth around the French letters. It then covers
a range of topics including -er verbs, gender, articles, adverbs, ¨ētre,
adjectives, pronouns, avoir, numbers, aller, and faire.
While the video could benefit from more native French speakers, this is a
delightful introduction to the language, and a fun complement to a high school
or college French class. Don't miss the flubbed lines during the credits.
French, Part 2 is also available. --Jenny Brown --This text
refers to the VHS Tape edition.
Description
The Standard Deviants DVDs feature: * Interactive testing
and practice exams * An easy-to-use, menu-driven format * Instant accessibility
to key content areas * Helpful resources, such as charts, terms, formulas, and
lists * High-quality digital picture and sound * Additional footage not
available on VHS
The Standard Deviants' modern approach to learning and understanding makes
difficult subjects accessible and even enjoyable. Recommended by over 500
educators and professors, the Standard Deviants DVD is the ultimate way to relax
and learn.
All Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:
Poor quality production, January 6, 2005
Perhaps the DVD would've been easier to follow if it weren't for the poor
production quality of the DVD. The colours are way off. First, I thought it had
to do with the settings on my PC, but the DVD looks horrible (too much red) also
on my new TV.
The pronunciation of some of the French words is off, the scetches are cheesy
and the graphics are poor and often incomplete.
All in all, I wouldn't recommend these DVD-series. It's a shame I bought both
the DVD's already. --This text refers to the DVD
edition
6 of 6 people found the
following review helpful:
Superb for relearners as well as neophytes, August 27, 2004
I learned French fluently when I was young. But that was more than 40 years
ago, and my French has gotten very rusty. I've been struggling to relearn the
language for a year, including a two week visit to France last Fall. I took a
brief class before the trip, and have tried a variety of tools, including online
instruction and tapes. All helped, but none were fully satisfying. Until now.
This Standard Deviants program has by far the best pedagogical method I've ever
seen for learning French. It is thorough without being monotonous or pedantic.
The humor turns some people off, but I found most of it imaginative and helpful.
For example, the tape illustrates the importance of accents by noting that the
phrases for "Please repeat" and "Please pass gas again" differ by only one
accent over the first "e". I have researched this, and they are strictly
correct, but their example is far from obvious. My wife, who has little French
experience, also enjoyed and profited from the tape.
--This text refers to the VHS Tape edition
4 of 14 people found the
following review helpful:
Didn't help, June 11, 2004
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Reviewer: |
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A viewer (Colorado) |
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I saw this in the bookstore and bought it, hoping that maybe my French skills
could improve. I was taking French 101 in college and needed some help (if being
tutored by a female, I'd get no work done). The humor was so distracting and
dumb. Ah, Standard Devients, you're breakin my balls. If you search the web for
free French lessons, you'll find tons of em. The Standard Deviants breeze
through their lessons, leaving a French-Canadian like myself cross-eyed in the
dust. Maybe foreign languages aren't my thing, but I watched the DVD twice (with
a twitchy eye the second time) and still got a C in the class, and I paid
complete attention. I went to class everyday and did the workbook, too. Maybe
some good-looking actresses would help this video, and perhaps somebody who
knows about proper video lighting/coloring, or maybe better content
organization. It goes over the bare-minimum basics, and unless you're five years
old and/or can learn a foreign language easily, I'd stick with searching the
Internet and/or buying cassette tapes. As they stated at the beginning of the
video, it's just a supplement; you should go to class and blah blah blah. You'd
be better off watching some French foreign films-- or maybe watch movies that
have French audio-tracks with French & English subtitles. Memorize the movie in
English, then re-watch it in French. I learned more using that method than by
watching 10 people jack around in a plotless video for 90 minutes.
And yes, I'm Canuckian.
14 of 15 people found the
following review helpful:
Great for those who know zero french, May 12, 2004
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Reviewer: |
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Harry (Chicago) |
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I strongly reccomend this DVD for those who are just starting to learn
French. This DVD covers the very basics that will be needed to understand
anything French. It introduces the viewer to understanding that a verb in French
(like "go" in english, "aller" in French) is different based on who is doing the
action. If I "go", then "go" is written "vais"; if we "go", then it is written "allons"
and pronounced differently. I found this element of learning French painful at
the start, that instead of learning one word for "go" I had to learn six. But
once I became accostumed to it, learning became much easier. You can also expect
to learn a little about numbers and colors, and a few verbs and nouns.
This DVD in no way will leave you knowing enough French to go and speak it.
This DVD, and part II, leaves the student with enough basic information so that
learning will become much easier. For example, I used the TV series "French in
Action". At the start of my studies with lessons 1-6, I had a great deal of
trouble understanding what was going on. After watching the Standard Deviants
DVD it became much easeir.
One more thing about this DVD. It was entertaining and enjoyable to watch. I
did not feel like I was working to learn, rather I felt more like I was watching
a show and everything was sticking, that I was remembering what they taught. I
highly recommend this for the absolute begenner.
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