DVDs:
The First Decade
2007 marked
the end of the first decade of DVDs and represented a profound change
in the motion picture business. Where previously, home video was an
ancillary market, with the full penetration of the inexpensively manufactured
5-inch (actually, 12cm) format (and while artists and film executives-and
television producers-are not entirely willing to admit it yet), DVDs
are now the final product. Theatrical or broadcast distribution has
become an occasionally profitable marketing step to that end. No theatrical
film and virtually no non-reality network television program today is
budgeted without the knowledge that it will also be released on DVD.
Additionally, DVDs have altered the artistic designs of the films themselves,
providing an emotional steam valve for writers, directors and so on,
allowing them to compromise the theatrical version of a production with
the knowledge that their personal vision will eventually be disseminated
to perhaps an even larger audience. This has disadvantages-the creators
do not fight as hard, initially, to preserve their artistic integrity;
and their alternate versions can lack the necessary discipline that
boxoffice responsiveness would require-as well as the more obvious advantages-not
only do DVDs foster greater artistic freedom, but they expand the audience's
consciousness by revealing the alternative dramatic and artistic dimensions
in which a film exists (in the most general terms, that characters can
both live and die simultaneously; that there is drama and comedy in
the creative process itself; and so on). Regardless of the pluses and
minuses, it is unquestionable that DVDs have, in effect, altered the
playing field of making movies, forever.
The following ten
titles are an ordered representation of the most significant DVDs to
reach the marketplace during that first decade:
 |
1. The Lord of
the Rings Extended Editions (New
Line Home Entertainment). By the time Peter Jackson
finished shooting his paradigmatic fantasy trilogy, it was clear that
the theatrical films were simply a way station and that the opportunity
to create the longer DVD versions was fueling the fire of his creative
enthusiasm and industry. First and foremost, the three films are ideal
programs for DVD playback. Their length is less taxing in a home environment,
while their many special effects and action scenes create one demonstration
sequence after another that can utilize the full expanse of audio and
video playback. Additionally, the three films in the trilogy are each
accompanied by production featurettes of lengths equal to the features
themselves (every film and its supplement is spread to four platters),
and numerable commentary tracks in which every major artist who worked
on the films has an opportunity to reflect upon his contribution and
share his memories of the production.
 |
2. The Ultimate
Matrix (Warner Home
Video). The original Matrix was the first blockbuster
DVD, again because in addition to the basic, uncompromised intelligence
of the drama, the film contained many spectacular special effect sequences
that were especially invigorating in the home video environment. The
film's two sequels may have been an artistic and intellectual letdown,
but the visceral stimulations continued, and in the outstanding ten-platter
set, the flaws of those films are confronted head on by 'pro and con'
commentary tracks, as well as extensive and stimulating supplements
that examine not only how the films were created, but what scientific
and philosophical resources served as their inspiration. 20th Century
Fox Home Entertainment's The Alien Quadrilogy performed a similar feat
with the less directly related quartet of Alien films, each presented
in both original theatrical format and in a longer director's cut, with
exhaustive supplements and commentaries. On a smaller scale, Fox's The
Star Wars Trilogy, Warner's Blade Runner The Final Cut and
Lionsgate's Terminator 2: Judgment Day combine spectacular transfers
with copious supplements.
 |
3. Brazil
(The Criterion Collection).
The supplementary sections and commentaries on DVDs did not arise suddenly
from nowhere. In the decade the preceded the first DVDs, 12-inch laser
discs (LDs) provided a high-end home video outlet that allowed filmmakers
to share their experiences about the filmmaking process, with trial
by error determining what sort of commentary and supplemental formats
were effective and what were not. From almost the very beginning of
LDs, the Criterion Collection specialized in producing 'collector's
editions' of important films, and it was essentially their template
that DVD producers utilized as soon as the format became cost productive.
Criterion itself made the shift almost immediately from LDs to DVDs
and has produced scores of outstanding presentations that deliver not
only sterling transfers of classic and stimulating films, but extensive
supplements that enhance a viewer's appreciation of both the film itself
and its context within human culture. Many fans simply make it a habit
of obtaining every title Criterion releases, knowing that each program
will be rewarding and its presentation nearly flawless. Brazil,
which Criterion created initially for LD and then issued on DVD, is
nevertheless probably the best representation of how the DVD format
can be advantageously employed. Firstly, although the film's audio track
does not have an elaborate surround mix, Terry Gilliam's movie
is nevertheless a highly phantasmagorical experience well suited to
repeated home video playback. Secondly, its production history could
serve as a topic for a feature film itself (as nearly every Gilliam
film seems to, and one, at least, has). Taken away from Gilliam and
re-cut with the very best intentions by Universal Studios executives,
not only is the complete story of the troubled production presented,
but three very different cuts of the film are all featured, allowing
the viewer not just the opportunity to pass judgment on those responsible,
but to share in the alternative perspectives each version offers of
Gilliam's vision.
 |
4. The Simpsons
The Complete Sixth Season (20th
Century Fox Home Entertainment). There were complete collections
of television shows in shelf-busting videotape formats, and near the
end of their run, hefty, expensive boxed sets of popular American TV
series had begun to appear in Japan on LD, but it was the concise size
and relative inexpensiveness of cramming TV episodes onto DVDs that
allowed that portion of the market to achieve (much to the surprise
of traditional-minded distributors) relative parity with popular feature
films. At first, companies attempted to issue 'best of' packages, but
they quickly learned that viewers themselves wanted to pick and choose
their favorites, and that the ideal organized delivery format was the
'complete season,' which indeed, normally, represented a complete, singular
artistic effort on the part of TV series creators, who were essentially
living or dying, from an economic and production logistic standpoint,
from one season to the next. Television shows with continuing stories
actually play better on DVD than they do on the TV, because you don't
have to wait a week or a month from one cliffhanger to the next and,
more importantly, it is easier to access a show's greater themes when
it is viewed as a whole (you aren't nearly as annoyed by the digressions
in HBO Video's The Sopranos or the loopy turns that occur in Buena Vista
Home Entertainment's Lost). If you ever get a free month and the chance
to do it, watch all ten seasons of Warner's Friends from beginning to
end and you will realize that it is a magnificent six-character romantic
comedy with a brilliant, single-narrative arc, about the beginning,
middle and end stages of male and female bachelorhood. As fulfilling
as such programs have been, however, the best TV DVDs are those that
equal the experiences of the best theatrical DVDs in terms of supplementary
features. Indeed, when you hear the commentaries on MGM Home Entertainment's
Stargate SG-1 The Complete Fourth Season advance brilliantly from episode
to episode, creating what in essence is a complete filmmaking seminar
(and a very entertaining one at that), then the efforts on most feature
film commentaries pale in comparison. With its outstanding, morally
dense, continuing story, terrific commentaries and other superb supplements,
Fox's The Shield, which might just be the best television show
ever created anyway, comes close to achieving the ideal DVD, particularly
in The Complete Third Season. Nevertheless, television is inexorably
central to the American family, depictions of that family have long
been a primary topic of popular shows and, with animation allowing the
characters to avoid aging (although their voices change and the advancement
of time has created various cultural paradoxes), The Simpsons
has become the penultimate American television show. And, season after
season, the Simpsons collections have been exceptional not only
for the basic humor and insightfulness of the program itself, but for
the DVD supplements, especially the commentary tracks, which, like the
Stargate commentaries, strive to open up as widely as possible
the creative process that the artists went through to achieve both the
images and the stories. Sixth Season represents the best so far,
as the creators were still in their initial throes of invention. Every
season has brilliantly funny episodes, but Sixth Season has the
fewest that are less than that.
 |
5. The Fantasia
Anthology (Walt Disney
Home Entertainment). No film company has been more conscientious
of preserving its artistic legacies and, therefore, no film company
has been in a better position to draw upon those resources for its DVDs
than Walt Disney. Disney has just one primary challenge, and that is
to satisfy without confusion the interest its product generates in both
adults and very small children. To this end, Disney has released its
best known titles as many as three or even four times to date, usually
with the initial release designed for general audiences, followed by
a more sophisticated collector's edition for enthusiasts, and then subsequent
versions with modified extras to continually massage its forever renewable
market. The best Disney collector's editions exhibit an unabashed pride
in the Disney legacy and make use of the company's comprehensive archive
not just to present a historical portrait of a film's creation, but
to explore the dynamics of that creation. From Snow White to
the Pixar films, the sets have combined interviews with artists past
and present, explored the inspirations for both designs and narrative,
and have offered related works that allow the viewer to better understand
the significance and uniqueness of the central program. Like Warner's
Looney Tunes collections, Disney's boxed sets of classic cartoon shorts
have included extensive background and archival materials, and pristine
transfers. Yet, even within this context, Fantasia Anthology
stands out for the comprehensive scope of its historical supplement,
for the aural and visual impact of its central programs (both the original
Fantasia, and Fantasia 2000), and for an effort so reverential
that animation originally conceived and then dropped from the films
has been expressly completed for the DVD.
 |
6. Ford at Fox
(Fox). Whenever
an outsized collection of less-than-blockbuster films is issued in a
pricey DVD set, it is dogged by derisive remarks about 'ego trips' and
unjustified expenses, but for a true movie fan, such collections are
a godsend, the very best of which replicate what was once accessible
only to a few hardy souls-the 'museum retrospective.' Warner's Oliver
Stone Collection, when it first came out, included supplementary
features and expanded versions of films that were not available as single
DVDs, all with fresh commentaries by Stone. Taken individually, they
might not even be that interesting-who wants to sit through Nixon
to begin with, let alone a longer version of it?-but given the opportunity
to access so many works by one artist that are presented with the intention
of being viewed in tandem, and especially with that artist's own reflection
upon his work so readily at hand, turns the whole into a sum much greater
and more rewarding than its parts. For Fox's gargantuan set, representing
about half of the movies John Ford made at Fox, the collection
reissues excellent special editions of great classics (Grapes of
Wrath, Criterion's Young Mr. Lincoln), presents forthright
editions of classics for the first time (The Iron Horse, The Prisoner
of Shark Island), unveils largely forgotten gems (Seas Beneath,
Pilgrimage) and demonstrates that even Ford's most rote, studio
assignments (Wee Willie Winkie, Judge Priest) contain invaluable
moments of cinematic brilliance that might easily be passed by if they
were not thusly anthologized. As much as Fox is offering up some great
entertainment with the set, it is, even more so, planting a flag on
the shores of film history for the utilization of the DVD as a primary
tool in the exploration and understanding of cinema.
 |
7. King Kong
(Warner). It
took Warner a long time to get around to releasing a movie that ought
to have been included with its first sloppy batch of introductory titles,
but at least when they did finally put the classic 1933 feature out,
they did so in smashing style. Not only was the transfer pristine and
the historical supplement exhaustive, but they even allowed Peter
Jackson the ultimate fan indulgence of attempting to replicate the
infamous 'spiders in the canyon' sequence, in black-and-white, so it
can be optionally inserted in the running of the film. Not every classic
movie needs this kind of treatment-Warner has done a lovely if more
traditional job putting out extensive collector's editions of The
Maltese Falcon, Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Jazz Singer, 2001:
A Space Odyssey, Gone with the Wind and many, many other great films
in its library-but the King Kong DVD contemporizes the film's
popularity without spoiling its legacy, and preserves its joys for fresh
generations of fans.
 |
8. Firefly The
Complete Series (Fox).
Fox has demonstrated an uncanny ability to utilize DVDs in the resuscitation
of supposedly dead television programs. The popularity of its Family
Guy sets was the primary inspiration for the animated series' belated
renewal. While Futurama has not been quite that lucky, its success
on DVD has facilitated new direct-to-DVD episodes. For Joss Whedon's
short-lived sci-fi action series, Firefly, the DVD set was a
revelation, presenting the episodes for the first time in their proper
order and unveiling several that did not achieve a broadcast before
the series was misguidedly cancelled. Seen coherently, the show was
both exciting and stimulating in the best tradition of science-fiction
programs, and the popularity of its definitive DVD release inspired
the production of the feature film, Serenity, which was itself
issued as a reasonably enjoyable Collector's Edition by Universal. By
way of comparison, the normally resourceful Warner completely dropped
the ball with the potentially awesome Birds of Prey, which will
probably never make it to DVD.
 |
9. The Complete
Monterey Pop Festival
(Criterion).
DVDs are for more than just movies and TV shows. Music programs are
ubiquitous and range from platters containing a single music video,
sometimes glued to a CD on the flip side, to boxed sets of Richard
Wagner's Ring Cycle (you want some interesting dreams? Watch the
entire Ring Cycle in a single day
). Operas have benefited
greatly from DVDs, with excellent sound mixes, optional subtitling and
the visual perfection of high definition image recording. Ballet, although
much more beholden to the whims of camera angles and editing, has also
benefited, particularly in superb artist-oriented collections such as
Criterion's Martha Graham Dance on Film. From pristine looking
and sounding concerts to exhaustively researched 'Review' programs,
rock music has been thoroughly represented on DVD, and while individual
tastes will determine the appeal of most programs, productions such
as TGA's Rolling Stones Four Flicks are representative of the
potential DVDs have for not only delivering incredible picture and sound,
but supplying a fluid supplement of behind-the-scenes images and revelations.
As for Criterion's Monterey program, its heart is the classic D.A.
Pennebaker documentary about the watershed 1967 music festival,
but from there the collection expands to include extensive background
information about the festival itself and exhaustive selections of unused
footage, all transferred with exquisite care and a good deal of audio
power.
 |
10. The Up Series
(First Run).
Finally, while special effect action films greatly benefit from the
quality of their audio and video transfers on DVD, and fictional films,
classic or otherwise, are enhanced by well-made (or amusingly wrong-headed)
supplements, no genre has benefited more from DVD design than the documentary.
The reason for this is quite specific. The documentary is meant to teach,
and the DVD supplement is meant to teach, so a documentary with a supplement
is enhanced not doubly but exponentially in its educational rewards.
From the Ken Burns and David Attenborough epics to small or challenging
works like BBC Home Video's Into the Arms of Strangers or HBO's Capturing
the Friedmans, DVD supplements greatly enhance and sometimes even
alter a viewer's understanding of the material presented in the original
program. It should also be noted that extensive sets of classic championship
sports competitions, also accompanied by extensive supplements, are
beginning to proliferate. Yet there is one documentary DVD set that
is as unique as it is rewarding. Michael Apted's monumental lifework,
revisiting and re-interviewing individuals every seven years for nearly
five decades, The Up Series, enables the viewer to see each iteration
of the project in its entirety and also hear Apted's insightful commentary
on the 42 Up film, in which he discusses the challenges the project
has presented and goes over the backgrounds of the individuals in ways
that the films cannot.
January 9, 2008
DVD
Roundup: This Week's DVD Releases
The
Review Vault
- by
Douglas Pratt
Douglas Pratt's DVD-Laser Disc Newsletter
is published monthly.
For a free sample, call (516)594-9304 or go to his
website at www.DVDLaser.com