---
product_id: 6795766
title: "Rick and Morty: The Complete First Season (Blu-ray)"
price: "109.46 DT"
currency: TND
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.tn/products/6795766-rick-and-morty-the-complete-first-season-blu-ray
store_origin: TN
region: Tunisia
---

# Rick and Morty: The Complete First Season (Blu-ray)

**Price:** 109.46 DT
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Rick and Morty: The Complete First Season (Blu-ray)
- **How much does it cost?** 109.46 DT with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.tn](https://www.desertcart.tn/products/6795766-rick-and-morty-the-complete-first-season-blu-ray)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Description

Rick and Morty: The Complete First Season (Blu-ray) From comedic masterminds Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland comes Rick and Morty: The Complete First Season Blu-ray and DVD. Adult Swim’s newest series follows the adventures of mad scientist Rick Sanchez, who returns after 20 years to live with his daughter, her husband, and their children Morty and Summer. All 11 episodes of the hilariously frantic comedy will be available on Blu-ray and DVD, featuring a unique slip case designed by the show creators themselves.

Review: Buy three copies - Easily the funniest show on TV at the moment. I don't even need to sell you on the show though, so I'll talk about the Blu-ray. The quality of the video is excellent. I'm happy to see the show looking its best: smooth animation, well-mixed sound, and no video compression artifacts. I can't say the same for my experience watching the show on cable. The episodes are uncensored. I didn't notice any difference visually but the language is all there. There's no option for censored audio as far as I can tell. Fine by me but I know that bothers some people. The creator commentaries are hilarious. Lots of great banter the entire time, just the right amount of talking about the episode and cracking jokes. As a fan, you learn a lot about the group dynamic behind the show. It's exciting to learn who brings which elements of humor to each episode. If you are familiar with Roiland's work before Rick and Morty, it was hilarious to learn that half of the Roiland-esque humor is actually Dan Harmon or another writer making fun of Justin, and then the mockery makes its way into the final product. I watched one bonus commentary with Matt Groening, Pendleton Ward, and a few others. It was pretty awful. None of them had anything really interesting to say about the episode when they weren't just sitting and watching it. It's a shame, because I'm a big Pen fan. I was very happy that was a second commentary track. The behind the scenes special feature is alright. It goes for a wacky-to-the-point-of-awkwardness host gag that succeeds about as much as it fails. It's unfortunate because I wanted more office (bathroom) tours, more interviews with artists, and less of the host's antics. This behind the scenes is the only glimpse we get of a lot of the faces behind the show. Obviously I enjoy irreverent humor, I'm watching this show, but I like it more when the humor connects and it's balanced. It's worth a watch but it'll grate a little and leave you wanting the raw interview footage. There aren't many deleted scenes, but most episodes have at least one. I wish there was a way to watch them all with a few seconds of context from the finished episode. In general, the deleted scenes were all deleted for good reason, so it's not a huge loss either way. Animatics of every episode are on the disc. They're a little rough to watch but you can see a lot of stuff that was cut or changed that doesn't really fit the definition of a "deleted scene". They do not each have production-focused commentary (like on the Futurama DVDs). That's ok. The Blu-ray comes with a parody Chick Tract called "The Good Morty", giving you another look at the religion of the Mortys in Close Encounters of a Rick Kind. It's a great little souvenir to have. It would have been awesome if there had been three copies in the case, and the content evangelized the show, so people who bought the DVD could leave them in public bathrooms or hand them to friends, like actual chick tracts. Anyway, show is great, Blu-ray is great, go ahead and buy it.
Review: LIfe is Hilariously Meaningless - I discovered Rick & Morty on a late-night Cartoon Network marathon block. I don't really watch that channel much, as I tend to find the humor of shows like Robot Chicken and Squidbillies gets tedious quickly. This one caught me totally off-guard with its relentless, rapid-fire jokesmithing. I was mildly surprised to find that Dan Harmon was a co-creator. I've always regarded its humor and characters as very hit-and-miss, and frankly felt the constant campaigning to keep it on the air year-after-year was a sign people seriously needing to get over it. But Rick & Morty never once scored a miss with me. Every episode of season 1 is a quotable-filled classic. The premise is pretty straightforward. The smartest man in existence--that is to say, not just now, but throughout all time, and not just in this universe, but all of the infinite dimensions--moves in with his estranged daughter and spends his time engaging in substance abuse while devising gadgets in the garage. He takes his grandson on adventures to perilous parallel universes, usually in order to find more exotic narcotics to abuse. You see, genuine intelligence is not an asset in this life, because genuine intelligence penetrates deception, and most people's notion of how to enjoy life is based on swathing themselves in layers of denial regarding its duration and significance. Unlike most sitcoms that are designed to help you cope with the ugly truth of human existence through escapism, Rick & Morty is a tool with which you cope through confrontation. The Blu-ray is not chock full of features. If you have these episodes on your DVR, you're not getting anything you don't already own. There's a "behind-the-scenes" video, but it doesn't provide any anecdotal insights about the show's creation, just writer's-room and sound-booth shenanigans. There are also deleted scenes (i.e. storyboards) for most episodes, but it's not a must-have. Really, the main reason to buy this is to vote with your wallet for the continued production of one of the funniest shows on TV.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Contributor | Various |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 out of 5 stars 4,271 Reviews |
| Format | NTSC |
| Genre | Animation, Comedy |
| Language | English |
| Number Of Discs | 1 |

## Product Details

- **Contributor:** Various
- **Format:** NTSC
- **Genre:** Animation, Comedy
- **Language:** English
- **Number Of Discs:** 1

## Images

![Rick and Morty: The Complete First Season (Blu-ray) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81iKR5AWx3L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Buy three copies
*by D***G on October 12, 2014*

Easily the funniest show on TV at the moment. I don't even need to sell you on the show though, so I'll talk about the Blu-ray. The quality of the video is excellent. I'm happy to see the show looking its best: smooth animation, well-mixed sound, and no video compression artifacts. I can't say the same for my experience watching the show on cable. The episodes are uncensored. I didn't notice any difference visually but the language is all there. There's no option for censored audio as far as I can tell. Fine by me but I know that bothers some people. The creator commentaries are hilarious. Lots of great banter the entire time, just the right amount of talking about the episode and cracking jokes. As a fan, you learn a lot about the group dynamic behind the show. It's exciting to learn who brings which elements of humor to each episode. If you are familiar with Roiland's work before Rick and Morty, it was hilarious to learn that half of the Roiland-esque humor is actually Dan Harmon or another writer making fun of Justin, and then the mockery makes its way into the final product. I watched one bonus commentary with Matt Groening, Pendleton Ward, and a few others. It was pretty awful. None of them had anything really interesting to say about the episode when they weren't just sitting and watching it. It's a shame, because I'm a big Pen fan. I was very happy that was a second commentary track. The behind the scenes special feature is alright. It goes for a wacky-to-the-point-of-awkwardness host gag that succeeds about as much as it fails. It's unfortunate because I wanted more office (bathroom) tours, more interviews with artists, and less of the host's antics. This behind the scenes is the only glimpse we get of a lot of the faces behind the show. Obviously I enjoy irreverent humor, I'm watching this show, but I like it more when the humor connects and it's balanced. It's worth a watch but it'll grate a little and leave you wanting the raw interview footage. There aren't many deleted scenes, but most episodes have at least one. I wish there was a way to watch them all with a few seconds of context from the finished episode. In general, the deleted scenes were all deleted for good reason, so it's not a huge loss either way. Animatics of every episode are on the disc. They're a little rough to watch but you can see a lot of stuff that was cut or changed that doesn't really fit the definition of a "deleted scene". They do not each have production-focused commentary (like on the Futurama DVDs). That's ok. The Blu-ray comes with a parody Chick Tract called "The Good Morty", giving you another look at the religion of the Mortys in Close Encounters of a Rick Kind. It's a great little souvenir to have. It would have been awesome if there had been three copies in the case, and the content evangelized the show, so people who bought the DVD could leave them in public bathrooms or hand them to friends, like actual chick tracts. Anyway, show is great, Blu-ray is great, go ahead and buy it.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ LIfe is Hilariously Meaningless
*by S***. on December 19, 2014*

I discovered Rick & Morty on a late-night Cartoon Network marathon block. I don't really watch that channel much, as I tend to find the humor of shows like Robot Chicken and Squidbillies gets tedious quickly. This one caught me totally off-guard with its relentless, rapid-fire jokesmithing. I was mildly surprised to find that Dan Harmon was a co-creator. I've always regarded its humor and characters as very hit-and-miss, and frankly felt the constant campaigning to keep it on the air year-after-year was a sign people seriously needing to get over it. But Rick & Morty never once scored a miss with me. Every episode of season 1 is a quotable-filled classic. The premise is pretty straightforward. The smartest man in existence--that is to say, not just now, but throughout all time, and not just in this universe, but all of the infinite dimensions--moves in with his estranged daughter and spends his time engaging in substance abuse while devising gadgets in the garage. He takes his grandson on adventures to perilous parallel universes, usually in order to find more exotic narcotics to abuse. You see, genuine intelligence is not an asset in this life, because genuine intelligence penetrates deception, and most people's notion of how to enjoy life is based on swathing themselves in layers of denial regarding its duration and significance. Unlike most sitcoms that are designed to help you cope with the ugly truth of human existence through escapism, Rick & Morty is a tool with which you cope through confrontation. The Blu-ray is not chock full of features. If you have these episodes on your DVR, you're not getting anything you don't already own. There's a "behind-the-scenes" video, but it doesn't provide any anecdotal insights about the show's creation, just writer's-room and sound-booth shenanigans. There are also deleted scenes (i.e. storyboards) for most episodes, but it's not a must-have. Really, the main reason to buy this is to vote with your wallet for the continued production of one of the funniest shows on TV.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Coarse Language Intact and Sci-Fi Fun
*by M***9 on November 7, 2014*

Yes my name is Beth Smith, NO, it's not because I'm a Rick and Morty fan. That's really my name. lol. (For those who don't know, Beth Smith is Morty's mom.) Like with "Adventure Time", I was turned on to Rick and Morty by my 14 year old son. We're both fans of "Adventure Time", "Futurama", "Star Trek", etc. So when "Rick and Morty" first came on I wasn't sure what to think of it, but then as time went on, I realized I was hooked in yet another fandom. Like many other cartoon series geared toward adults or older teens, "Rick and Morty" references other pop culture which may or may not be vague to younger viewers. For example, an episode about Morty's sister working for an old man named Mr. Needful, which is an homage to Stephen King's "Needful Things". Episode four (M Night Shaym Aliens) has the best soundtrack of them all, when it keeps playing Jerry Rafferty's "Baker Street" in instrumental and the aliens that Rick and Morty encounter remind me of "Megamind". The cover art on the disc case (not the cardboard sleeve) even shows some creatures that look like they were inspired by "Futurama" and "Adventure Time". (We noted a turquoise alien that looked like Lumpy Space Princess. Of course there ARE "Adventure Time" ties here..as one of R&M's creators Justin Roiland voices Earl of Lemongrab in that series!) The series itself is spun off of a raunchier version called "The Adventures of Doc and Mharti" (these can be found on You Tube) ...which of course parodies "Back to the Future". (The series here explores alternate dimensions however.) But I want to give kudos to why the DVD is better than the episodic versions. Outside of no commercial breaks, TV can only let one get away with so much. Even though the word s**t can be said on primetime cable now, the f word and a few other derogatory words still cannot. (Only "South Park" got away with that.) Often when you purchase a DVD set of a TV series, the censored version is on the DVD too. Not so with "Rick and Morty"! The actual words can be heard, no bleeps. Those with sensitive ears might just want to overlook it, but honestly if you're watching something that airs on Adult Swim in the first place, you should have no room to complain about coarse language. :) The best reason of all of course is to binge watch "Rick and Morty" any time you want, and not have to wait on Adult Swim to air them. I haven't seen it often as of late. The only downside is that there are only eleven episodes in this box set, and it leaves you aching for more. So I hope they hurry up and air season 2 soon and not do what Cartoon Network/Adult Swim is notorious for doing is releasing subsequent seasons slowly and leave fans hanging for too long.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Rick & Morty: Season 1 [Blu-ray]
- Rick and Morty: The Complete Second Season [Blu-ray]
- Rick and Morty: Season 3 (Blu-ray)

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*Product available on Desertcart Tunisia*
*Store origin: TN*
*Last updated: 2026-06-21*