The Office Complete Fifth Season 
This is a used Region 2/RSA DVD set in good condition.   
Shipping is R35 countrywide, via Econopost, with a tracking number, no collections
 
   Season Five is not just another day at The Office,  delivering break-ups, corporate shake-ups, and a game-changing finale  that, as with Jim (John Krasinski), should leave you ecstatic and  speechless. 
The writers continue their masterful handling of the Jim and  Pam (Jenna Fischer) romance, taking care of some unfinished business  from last season's finale in the season opener with a glorious  rain-swept gas station proposal. Their initial separation--while she  attends art school in New York--avoids the usual sitcom mechanics ("We  are not that couple," Jim states as he aborts a panicked trip to see  her). The course of true love is no smoother for The Office's  other soul mates, Michael Scott (Steve Carrell) and "major dork" Holly  Flax (an Emmy-worthy Amy Ryan), the new HR rep. Meanwhile, Angela  (Angela Kinsey) and Dwight (Rainn Wilson) are having office trysts under  the nose of her fiancé, Andy (Hangover star Ed Helms, having a  breakout season in a career year). 
On the corporate front, Michael  shockingly quits after butting heads with no-nonsense new boss Charles  Miner (Idris Elba). In a brilliant stroke, Jim immediately gets on  Charles's bad side, much to Dwight's delight. 
The formation of The  Michael Scott Paper Company is a highlight of the season, as Michael and  his dream team, Pam and Ryan (B.J. Novak), improbably put a major dent  in Dunder Mifflin's sales (but at what cost?). For everyone who wonders  how the blundering and tactless Michael keeps his job, it is instructive  to get a glimpse of his sales acumen in the episodes "Heavy  Competition," in which Michael poaches one of Dwight's clients, and  "Broke," in which he negotiates a buyout of his struggling company. The Office's own dream team got dreamier with the addition of Ellie Kemper as "Erin," the adorable and naïve new receptionist. The Office  still makes for cringe-worthy discomfort television (see a reunited  Michael and Holly's excruciating skit at the "Company Picnic" in the  season finale), but some of the best episodes are the ones in which the  Scranton branch bonds in the face of adversity. 
A season benchmark is  the episode in which the former Michael Scott Paper Company office space  is transformed into "Café Disco" and all squabbles and resentments are  forgotten on the dance floor. This season is representative of why The Office  is one of television's most DVR'd series. Each episode offers priceless  bits of background comic business and charming character grace notes  that lend themselves to repeated viewing. Among them: Andy's drunken  late night phone call to Angela in "Company Trip"; Pam demonstrating her  volleyball prowess in "Company Picnic"; Kelly (Mindy Kaling) setting up  one of the series' very best "that's what she saids" in "Customer  Survey"; and Andy and Kelly's "dance off" in "Café Disco." As Dwight  notes in "Heavy Competition," "There's a lot going on" in The Office, and in that chaos, this series soars. -- 
 
