THE AVENGERS: comparitive packaging
I thought this might interest some here, what with the obsession many have with various DVDs and the like.
Back in the late 1980s, my local PBS station ran what they described as "the most-requested TV series" by viewers & supporters: THE AVENGERS with Patrick Macnee. Specifically, all that was available, Seasons 4 & 5 with Diana Rigg & Season 6 with Linda Thorson. However, as per the usual habit of Philly's Channel 12, the prints were MISERABLE. Every single one of them was FUZZY, and some, quite damaged.
Nevertheless, I stayed up LATE past my bedtime to record every one of them straight off the air, so they wouldn't be worse by copy-editing them after-the-fact (a requirement when they'd do "fund-raisers" at the time-- 2 episodes back-to-back with long interruptions in between and sometimes during). This "most requested" show they ran Sunday nights at 11:30 PM, so during fund-raising weeks, it wouldn't get over until 2:30 AM, and I had to get up for work the next morning!
I'm really running late when it comes to DVDs, but last year-- without doing much research, I got (quite cheap) a LARGE box from a seller on Ebay without knowing exactly what was in it. Turns out it was A&E's licensed 2002 box of Seasons 4 & 5. The huge slipcase contained 12 regular-sized DVD cases, each of which contained 3 or 4 episodes. The box takes up 9-1/2 INCHES of shelf space. Isn't that absurd???
Well, as part of the poorly-described "auction", the seller also included one 2006 box containing the first HALF of season 2 with Honor Blackman, Julie Stevens & Jon Rollason. This box was 1-1/4" thick, meaning a whole season would be 2-1/2", and 2 seasons would be 5" thick. That's half the size of the earlier editions.
However, after getting these and starting in, I became aware that in 2010 Studio Canal in England had done full season boxes, and wound up getting both Season 2 & Season 3. Each box is 1-1/4", so 2 seasons is 2-1/2". That's like ONE-FOURTH the amount of shelf space as the 2002 editions!!!
It also seems that (for the most part) the 2010 discs have been "remastered" MORE than the earlier ones. Most episodes looked better, but most also had somewhat-dodgy SOUND. I put that down to the VIDEOTAPE and/or KINESCOPE source material (hard to be sure if these were copied off original tapes-- if they exist-- or off of kinescopes made from pointing a camera at a TV screen to create FILM copies.
The 2002 & 2006 US A&E discs have questionable packaging. ALL feature the actresses promenently. For example, "starring DIANA RIGG as Mrs. Emma Peel AND PATRICK MACNEE as John Steed-- despite Macnee being the STAR of the show. The 2010 Studio Canals have both pictured, and Macnee is listed FIRST.
Another oddity worth mentioning: the US A&E boxes have the episodes in BROADCAST order, while the UK Studio Canal boxes are in PRODUCTION order!!!
There's another problem, however...
The whole time I was watching the Honor Blackmans on the UK discs, I wondered if they were running at the right speed or not. Well, when I got the Diana Rigg box, I KNEW. They're running FAST. I just watched all 3 copies I had of Rigg's debut episode, "The Town of No Return", and here's how they clocked in:
Channel 12: 51:22
2002 A&E DVD: 51:44
2010 Studio Canal Region 2 DVD: 49:47
It was VERY noticable to me. Everything was moving fast, and the sound pitch was too high on everything. This is the ongoing CURSE of "PAL" vs. "NTSC".
But on top of that, while my old PBS videotape was heavily damaged, and the 2002 DVD was CLEAR, on the 2010 DVD, someone had CRANKED UP the CONTRAST higher. Blacks were MUCH blacker. In bright scenes, they looked fine. In dark scenes... TONS of detail DISAPPEARED.
I'm sure anyone who's watched the Warner Archive "HORROR OF DRACULA" or "DRACULA PRINCE OF DARKNESS" knows exactly what I mean. WHAT-- THE-- F***!!!?
I was so annoyed... I figured maybe I could put up with the picture being too dark, but not the speed thing. So I SENT IT BACK (which is a problem, as they're from England, and I have to pay the return postage on this one).
I've now ordered the Region 2 BLU-RAY of Season 4-- and, a REGION-FREE BLU-RAY PLAYER to go with it.
I learned a few months ago that BLU-RAY technology is such that it over-rides the NTSC / PAL problem because Blu-Ray discs are encoded by an ENTIRELY-DIFFERENT system!!! It's an ongoing education for me. This is why the several "Region-Free Blu-Rays" I've already bought all seem PERFECT.
I'm afraid this has made a complete waste of my buying a Region-Free DVD Player a year ago. When I get the new machine in, I'll no doubt be packing up both that and my 2-year-old Region 1 Blu-Ray Player.
I also found out, from about an hour's worth of research, that while many DVD players have RCA / AV jacks in the back, Blu-Ray players DO NOT. They ONLY come with HTML jacks, forcing one to have an HTML-RCA converter box (and a "charger" to go with it, sold separately) to connect the player to my STEREO SYSTEM-- an absolute necessity as my flat-screen TV's built-in speakers are WORTHLESS CRAP. I've got my players hooked into my stereo amp, and from there, a pair of 12-INCH speakers! However, when you use an HTML-RCA converter, the volume of the sound is cut in HALF-- so I have to crank the stereo system ALL THE WAY UP on most discs. OY!
All of which poses the question: WHY in the HELL hasn't anyone put out upgraded Region 1 DVDs or Blu-Rays of this series? WHY hasn't Studio Canal put out REGION-FREE BLU-RAYs??? What is wrong with all the people involved in design & marketing?
I don't think Seasons 2 & 3 have been put out on Blu-Ray... the source material is probably too low in quality to justify it.
Geez, I love this show as much OR MORE than DOCTOR WHO. This is a disgrace.
Oh yeah. One more thing. When ABC in America put up the money to make Season 4 on FILM they created an intro sequence specifically for the US market. It's always been an integral part of the opening credits of the show for me. But it's MISSING on ALL of these discs-- including the US ones. WTF??? If you ask me, since American money financed those episodes, the American intro should be on ALL prints. Everywhere.
The Studio Canal box apparently has it-- ONCE-- as an "extra". The US A&E boxes don't. Though they have the music from it on their menus. It's just insanity.
"Extraordinary crimes against the people, and the state, have to be avenged by agents extraordinary. Two such people are John Steed, top professional, and his partner, Emma Peel, talented amateur. Otherwise known as, THE AVENGERS."
(When I clocked my channel 12 version, I did not include that in the timing.)