When Sabrina Spellman is informed by her aunts Hilda and Zelda that she is a witch on her 16th birthday she is hesitant to believe them. Having been sent to live with them in Massachusetts by her Warlock father and mortal mother Sabrina has to learn the tricks of magic in order to receive her witch's license. Along the way she gets into many scrapes while figuring out how certain spells work. She also has to keep the secret from her boyfriend Harvey friends Jenny and later Valerie stuck-up nemesis Libby and her ever-suspicious vice-principal Mr. Kraft.
The third season of Sabrina maintains the quirky, charming humour of the previous two. The main plot revolves around the concept of Sabrina having achieved her 'Witches License' and the frustration and limitations caused by not being able to use it until she solves the 'Family Secret.' This season remains enjoyable with some good, clean, comedy moments. The show entails a lot of family fun mixed with fond nostalgia for teens growing up in the 90s. As always the show is enhanced by the witty and loveable Aunts Hilda and Zelda, high-school pals Harvey and Valerie and of course, mortal enemies Libby and Mr Kraft causing trouble for Sabrina wherever possible. In consistent fashion there are some obvious as well as more complex underlying moral messages shining through episode by episode, this season tackling issues like addiction, pressure, embarrassment, will-power and the importance of family as well as attempting to take some episodes into more innovative directions. Characters that particularly stood out watching this series include Sabrina herself continuing to appeal and portray her role convincingly, both aunts, Mrs Quick (the classic one-liners) and inevitably Salem, the tormented, talking cat. As a boxed set it, it is sufficient and well presented however it could have been more: there are no bonus features and some episodes have been edited, which is a real shame. Though the general concept of this show and the childish connotations that arise seem bizarre, do not be put off: it remains an innocent, light-hearted and fun show, worth a watch.
This is a fantastic DVD and I would highly recpommemnd that anyone bought it because it is absolutely amazing A+++
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