Archive for the '. DVDs' Category
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Product Description
The ultimate collection of one of the most beloved science fiction TV series of all time! From an original concept found in the unpublished papers of Star Trek Creator, Gene Roddenberry, comes one of the biggest syndicated TV hits ever. All 110 episodes of the series plus every extra to ever run in the DVD series.
Plot Summary
Genres: Action, Sci-Fi, Adventure, Drama, Fantasy
Tagline: Worlds Apart from the Rest
Plot Outline Captain Hunt and the crew of the Starship Andromeda set out on a mission to rebuild the Systems Commonwealth 300 years after its fall.
Plot Synopsis: Dylan Hunt is the captain of the Andromeda Ascendant, a ship which serves in the military force of the Systems Commonwealth, a monarchy which spans several galaxies. Hunt and his ship are subsequently frozen for several centuries. Revived by a passing salvage ship, Hunt is horrified to find that the Commonwealth has collapsed and all known galaxies have descended into barbarism. Hunt decides to take his ship and crew on a trip around the cosmos to attempt to restore order to the known galaxies.
Plot Keywords: Hero From The Past | Alternate Timeline | Civil War | Buck Rogers Scenario | Black Hole | Spacecraft | Alien | Age | Alcohol | Artificial Intelligence | Assassination
Plot Summary
Genres: Animation, Short, Comedy, Family, Fantasy, Musical
Plot Outline A grumpy hermit hatches a plan to steal Christmas from the Whos of Whoville.
Plot Synopsis: Bitter and hateful, the Grinch is irritated at the thought of the nearby village having a happy time celebrating Christmas. So disguised as Santa Claus, with his dog made to look like a reindeer, he raids the village to steal all the Christmas things. The village is sure to have a sad Christmas this year.
Plot Keywords: Monster | Sleigh | Obsession | Character Name In Title | Quest | Scheme | Whimsical | Whip | Affection | Assumed Identity | Christmas Star
Plot Summary
Genres: Drama, Family, Fantasy, Romance
Tagline: They’re making memories tonight!
Plot Outline An angel helps a compassionate but despairingly frustrated businessman by showing what life would had been like if he never existed.
Plot Synopsis: George Bailey has so many problems he is thinking about ending it all – and it’s Christmas ! As the angels discuss George, we see his life in flashback. As George is about to jump from a bridge, he ends up rescuing his guardian angel, Clarence. Clarence then shows George what his town would have looked like if it hadn’t been for all his good deeds over the years. Will Clarence be able to convince George to return to his family and forget about suicide ?
Plot Keywords: Happy Ending | Christmas Tree | Dysfunctional Family | Alternative History | Suicide Thoughts | Stroke | Old Man | Based On Novel | Great Depression | 1940s | Angel | Frustration
I was listening to LAST.FM online earlier in the day .. trying to come up with a band that was close or a cross between Jesus Jones and Porcupine Tree .. The first song that got my attention was called “HUMAN NRG” .. but, trying to search it on YouTube .. I didn’t listen to one song that I did not like. I’m not sure what songs are on this DVD .. the Amazon.com details are sketchy .. Here’s a sample video to listen to:
Plot Summary
Genres: Drama, Mystery, Sci-Fi
Tagline: No Man Is Just A Number.
Plot Outline A resigned secret agent is abducted to a bizarre prison where the warders are almost as determined to break him as he is in trying to escape.
Plot Synopsis: “The Prisoner” is a unique piece of television. It addresses issues such as personal identity and freedom, democracy, education, scientific progress, art and technology, while still remaining an entertaining drama series. Over seventeen episodes we witness a war of attrition between the faceless forces behind ‘The Village’ (a Kafkaesque community somewhere between Butlins and Alcatraz) and its most strong willed inmate, No. 6. who struggles ceaselessly to assert his individuality while plotting to escape from his captors.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com essential video
If a top-level spy decided he didn’t want to be a spy anymore, could he just walk into HQ and hand in his resignation? With all that classified knowledge in his head, would he be allowed to become a civilian again, free to go about his life? The answer, according to the stylish, brilliantly conceived 1960s British TV series The Prisoner, is a resounding no. In fact, instead of receiving a gold watch for his years of faithful service, our hero (played by Patrick McGoohan) is followed home to his London flat and knocked unconscious. When he awakens, he finds himself in a picturesque village where everyone is known by a number. Where is it? Why was he brought here? And, most important, how does he leave?
As we learn in Episode 1, Number 6 can’t leave. The Village’s “citizens” might dress colorfully and stroll around its manicured gardens while a band plays bouncy Strauss marches, but the place is actually a prison. Surveillance is near total, and if all else fails, there’s always the large, mysterious white ball that subdues potential escapees by temporarily smothering them. Who runs the Village? An ever-changing Number 2, who wants to know why Number 6 resigned. If he’d only cooperate, he’s told, life can be made very pleasant. “I’ve resigned,” he fumes. “I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered. My life is my own.” So sets the stage for the ultimate battle of wills: Number 6′s struggle to retain his privacy, sanity, and individuality against the array of psychological and physical methods the Village uses to break him.
So does he ever escape? And does he ever find out who Number 1 is? “Questions are a burden to others,” the Village saying goes. “Answers, a prison for oneself.” Within this complete 17-episode set (which contains the entire series), all is revealed. Or is it? –Steve Landau
Product Description
The Prisoner, one of the most remarkable and challenging science fiction series of all time, follows “No. 6,” a former government operative sent into a seemingly idyllic but twisted prison known as “The Village,” where he struggles to retain his identity in the face of sophisticated and relentless attempts by the powers-that-be (known as “No. 2″) to extract his secrets. Patrick McGoohan’s complete classic 17-episode TV series is presented in the fan-preferred viewing order, which follows events and dialogue within each story to provide a consistent and enjoyable viewing experience.
Product Details
Actors: Patrick McGoohan, Fenella Fielding, George Markstein, See more
Format: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, Full Screen, NTSC
Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only. Read more about DVD formats.)
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Number of discs: 10
Rating
Studio: A&E Home Video
DVD Release Date: September 25, 2001
Run Time: 884 minutes
Average Customer Review: based on 56 reviews. (Write a review.)
DVD Features:
Available Subtitles: English
Available Audio Tracks: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
10 Disc Set
Behind-The-Scenes Interviews With Original Series Production Manager Bernie Williams
Ultra-rare original footage of the 1966 location shooting, accompanied by commentary with Bernie Williams
Bonus Program: The Prisoner Video Companion
Rare, Alternate Version of the Episode The Chimes of Big Ben
Rarely Seen “Foreign File Cabinet” Footage
Rarely Seen “Textless” Intro & Outro Original Broadcast Trailers
Original Series Promotional Trailer
Gallery of Original Production and Promotional Materials
Production Stills Gallery
Interactive Map of the Village
Prisoner Trivia
Note on DVD sets: During shipping, discs in multidisc sets occasionally become dislodged without damage. Please examine and play these discs. If you are not completely satisfied, we’ll refund or replace your purchase.
From IMDb: Quotes & Trivia
ASIN: B00005NKCQ
Amazon.com Sales Rank: #4,509 in DVD (See Top Sellers in DVD)
Yesterday: #3,669 in DVD
For more information about “The Complete Prisoner Megaset” visit the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Many millions adore it, many others probably wish it was illegal, but there’s no denying the magnetic pull of American Idol on television viewers. Maybe it’s that we can’t avert our eyes from the train wreck that comprises about 90% of the contestants, or that we appreciate the heart and soul of the ones who are genuinely talented; or maybe we just love to hate house villain Simon Cowell and his caustic put-downs. Good, bad, or whatever, American Idol really is the phenomenon it claims to be. And with some ten hours of material spread out over three discs–there’s so much stuff here that even the bonus features have bonus features–this overview of the first four seasons will surely satisfy even the most ardent fans.
Disc One, The Best Of, takes us from the first step in the process (the cattle-call try-outs so popular they need stadiums to accommodate all the hopefuls) through the initial auditions and interviews with judges Cowell, Randy Jackson, and Paula Abdul to the performances seen on the telecasts themselves–including those by eventual winners Kelly Clarkson, Ruben Studdard, Fantasia Barrino, and Carrie Underwood, as well as runners-up Bo Bice and Clay Aiken, among others. In other words, nothing unexpected. Indeed, for many viewers, Disc Two (The Worst Of) will likely be the favorite. For it is here that the set focuses on our fascination with the profoundly clueless, those utterly untalented folks who make us squirm with their outlandish self-delusion and willingness, nay eagerness, to humiliate themselves on TV (epitomized by William “She Bangs” Hung, the so-bad-he’s-good sideshow that’s depressing on so many levels), only to then find themselves genuinely astonished and angry when they fail to make the cut. Finally, Disc Three includes an interview with Abdul, “homecoming” footage featuring Underwood and Bice, and additional interviews from the fourth season.
If American Idol has a dirty little secret (aside from Abdul’s personal life), it’s that the show hasn’t produced a single artist with not just a good voice but an original one–a Norah Jones, an Alicia Keys, a John Mayer, someone can play and write as well as sing. But then, that’s not what the show is about; we’re frequently reminded that this is “a singing competition,” pure and simple. Which brings us to what may well be this exhaustive (and perhaps exhausting, too) set’s defining moment: When a particularly awful “singer” begs to do another tune, Cowell says, “There’s only so much punishment a human being can take.” Replies the contestant: “No, I can take a lot more.” –Sam Graham
Product Description
Features both full Best of and Worst of American Idol discs and an exclusive bonus discs. Bonus disc features never-before-seen footage from season 4, interviews and exteneded hometown footage featuring Carrie, Bo, Constantine and Vonzelle and an exclusive interview with PAULA ABDUL.
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Many millions adore it, many others probably wish it was illegal, but there’s no denying the magnetic pull of American Idol on television viewers. Maybe it’s that we can’t avert our eyes from the train wreck that comprises about 90% of the contestants, or that we appreciate the heart and soul of the ones who are genuinely talented; or maybe we just love to hate house villain Simon Cowell and his caustic put-downs. Good, bad, or whatever, American Idol really is the phenomenon it claims to be. And with some ten hours of material spread out over three discs–there’s so much stuff here that even the bonus features have bonus features–this overview of the first four seasons will surely satisfy even the most ardent fans.
Disc One, The Best Of, takes us from the first step in the process (the cattle-call try-outs so popular they need stadiums to accommodate all the hopefuls) through the initial auditions and interviews with judges Cowell, Randy Jackson, and Paula Abdul to the performances seen on the telecasts themselves–including those by eventual winners Kelly Clarkson, Ruben Studdard, Fantasia Barrino, and Carrie Underwood, as well as runners-up Bo Bice and Clay Aiken, among others. In other words, nothing unexpected. Indeed, for many viewers, Disc Two (The Worst Of) will likely be the favorite. For it is here that the set focuses on our fascination with the profoundly clueless, those utterly untalented folks who make us squirm with their outlandish self-delusion and willingness, nay eagerness, to humiliate themselves on TV (epitomized by William “She Bangs” Hung, the so-bad-he’s-good sideshow that’s depressing on so many levels), only to then find themselves genuinely astonished and angry when they fail to make the cut. Finally, Disc Three includes an interview with Abdul, “homecoming” footage featuring Underwood and Bice, and additional interviews from the fourth season.
If American Idol has a dirty little secret (aside from Abdul’s personal life), it’s that the show hasn’t produced a single artist with not just a good voice but an original one–a Norah Jones, an Alicia Keys, a John Mayer, someone can play and write as well as sing. But then, that’s not what the show is about; we’re frequently reminded that this is “a singing competition,” pure and simple. Which brings us to what may well be this exhaustive (and perhaps exhausting, too) set’s defining moment: When a particularly awful “singer” begs to do another tune, Cowell says, “There’s only so much punishment a human being can take.” Replies the contestant: “No, I can take a lot more.” –Sam Graham
Product Description
Features both full Best of and Worst of American Idol discs and an exclusive bonus discs. Bonus disc features never-before-seen footage from season 4, interviews and exteneded hometown footage featuring Carrie, Bo, Constantine and Vonzelle and an exclusive interview with PAULA ABDUL.
















































