Product Description
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Admiral Nelson and Commander Crane are back in Volume
Two of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Irwin Allen's thrilling,
ground-breaking science-fiction adventure series!
Join the crew of the Seaview aboard their super high-tech
submarine, where no mission is too dangerous and no threat is too
deadly, be it enemy agents, mad scientists, deadly sea creatures,
or impending nuclear disaster. Welcome aboard the Seaview.
Destination: uncharted depths and unparalleled excitement.
Permission to board granted!
.com
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The first (and some say best) season of Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea went into its second half with strong ratings,
a loyal audience, and 16 episodes that have stood the test of
time. This compact 3-disc set presents all 16 of these 50-minute,
black-and-white episodes with sound and picture quality so crisp
and clean that it's hard to believe 41 years had passed between
their original broadcasts (Monday nights at 7:30 on ABC) and this
2006 DVD release. Like all Irwin Allen productions, the show is
characterized by simple, easy-to-follow plots, impressive
production values on a limited budget, and special effects
(mostly by pioneering effects master L.B. Abbott) that were
state-of-the-art by mid-'60s standards. As Admiral Nelson
(Richard Basehart), Commander Crane (David Hedison) and the crew
of the double-hulled, nuclear-powered submarine Seaview continue
their first-season adventures, most of these episodes deliver
plots that will be comfortably familiar to any fan of sci-fi
adventure shows of the '60s: obsessive scientists conducting
radical experiments, power-hungry villains from behind the Iron
Curtain (typically from the unspecified "People's Republic"), and
international criminals engaged in nefarious schemes of global
domination. Before the series shifted to color film (in the
second season) and greater emphasis on techno-gadgets and science
fiction, some of these first-season episodes involve
extraterrestrial beings or monsters that would become more common
in subsequent seasons.
The best of these sci-fi episodes is "The Invaders" (original
airdate January 25, 1965), guest-starring Robert Duvall
(misspelled "Duval" in the credits) as a powerful alien awakened
from suspended animation by an undersea earthquake. Other
episodes feature such now-familiar guest stars as Edward Asner
("The Exile"), George Sanders ("The Traitor"), Leslie Nielsen
("The Creature"), a very young-looking Tom Skerritt (appearing
briefly in the prologue of "The Enemies"), and such '60s TV
stalwarts as Torin Thatcher, Skip Homeier, Alvy (Green Acres)
Moore, J.D. Cannon, and Henry Silva. The most enjoyable episodes
feature a deep-space robot that's been dangerously reprogrammed
("The Indestructible Man"); a giant sub-crushing jellyfish
("Mutiny"); modern-day Nazis ("The Last Battle"); humans
surgically transformed into "The Amphibians"; an encounter with
the Loch Ness Monster ("The Secret of the Loch"); and a
cautionary tale ("The Human Computer") that may have inspired the
later Star Trek episode "The Ultimate Computer." And while only a
few of these episodes achieve genuine excellence, they're
consistently well-written, and the her-and-son-like dynamic
between Basehart and Hedison anchors the series with authentic
naval authority. DVD extras include an amusing 5-minute blooper
reel; a photo gallery of cover art from the highly collectible
Voyage comic books published by Gold Key in the mid-'60s; and
brief interview clips with David Hedison (looking great at nearly
80 years old) discussing the show's first season, his admiration
for Richard Basehart, and the blooper reels that Irwin Allen
compiled despite having "no sense of humor." For Voyage fans and
anyone who's catching up on the best shows of the '60s, these
DVDs offer loads of nostalgic entertainment. --Jeff Shannon