Since it's premiere on October 1, 1955, The Honeymooners has
established itself as a cornerstone of American television.
Amazing... considering that only 39 full-length classic episodes
were filmed, all included in this collection! The brilliant and
hilarious interplay between Ralph, Alice, Ed and Trixie set the
tone for countless situation comedies through the years but none
have quite captured the sheer magic of the Kramdens and the
Nortons struggling to carve out their piece of the American Dream
in Brooklyn. This comprehensive DVD collection is an everlasting
monument to one of the funniest and most enduring TV shows of all
time.
The CBS/Para DVD of The Honeymooners is a nicely packaged
set of all 39 shows, plus a modest sampling of special features.
The packaging is attractive and reasonably informative, offering
short plot descriptions and airdates for the shows, which are
presented in broadcast order. For those who watched
edited-for-time versions of The Honeymooners in syndication, this
DVD set offers one unexpected benefit. Because The Honeymooners
shows originally ran 26 minutes apiece, they were always cut to
fit latter-day 30-minute time slots. Knowing this would be done,
Gleason apparently tried to include a disposable scene or two,
but seeing what for many are completely new scenes amid very
familiar ones is, well, weird.
Video & Audio
-----------------
The Honeymooners was an early three-camera show, in black &
white on 35mm film in front of a live audience. A variation of
the system devised by Desi Arnaz and Karl Freund for I Love Lucy,
the Electronocam T-V Film System (don't you just love that name?)
seems, for whatever reasons, to have worked less well. Wanting to
keep the show as spontaneous as possible, Gleason rarely
rehearsed, and because of this the cameramen occasionally have
trouble keeping up with the action, leaving angles slightly out
of focus for long stretches. But the transfers themselves are
clean and generally quite sharp, with the 39 episodes and special
features spread over five single-sided discs. Some viewers have
complained about the sound on the first episode, "TV or Not TV,"
but while the audio is indeed muffled (though not inaudible), the
other episodes play just fine. English and Spanish subtitles are
offered.
Extras
------
Extras include the show's opening and closing sequences as they
originally aired, before the program went into its perennial
syndication. Basically, the opening credits and familiar theme
music are intact, but with a different announcer and a "Sponsored
by Buick" tag. For those weaned on the syndicated version, the
loud, unfamiliar and nasally voice of the original announcer is
amusingly jarring. The tags have a straight-faced Gleason, out of
character, p cars the Kramdens themselves could never
afford. The end titles roll over an inexplicable stick figure
background that looks just like the logo for The Saint. The only
other extra is The Honeymooners Anniversary Special, a 22-minute
celebration/documentary from 1990 hosted by Audrey Meadows,
featuring new and archival interviews with the main cast, several
of the writers, and jack-of-all-trades character players Frank
Marth and George The CBS/Para DVD of The Honeymooners is a
nicely packaged set of all 39 shows, plus a modest sampling of
special features. The packaging is attractive and reasonably
informative, offering short plot descriptions and airdates for
the shows, which are presented in broadcast order. For those who
watched edited-for-time versions of The Honeymooners in
syndication, this DVD set offers one unexpected benefit. Because
The Honeymooners shows originally ran 26 minutes apiece, they
were always cut to fit latter-day 30-minute time slots. Knowing
this would be done, Gleason apparently tried to include a
disposable scene or two, but seeing what for many are completely
new scenes amid very familiar ones is, well, weird.
The Honeymooners: "Classic 39" Episodes
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