Product description
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Barney Miller The Complete Series all 1-8 seasons (DVD,
2011, 25-Disc Set)
.com
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The sprawling, 25-disc presentation of Barney Miller:
The Complete Series pays proper and long-overdue tribute to what
is arguably one of the best sitcoms ever produced on television.
All 168 episodes of the groundbreaking series, which ran between
1974 and 1982, are included in the set, as are a respectable, if
not abundant, number of extras. But bells and whistles cannot
improve upon Miller's chief attribute--the humor and humanity
inherent in each episode, which detailed the life of a
captain (Hal Linden) at New York's dreary 12th Precinct, which
was populated by a squad of offbeat but hardworking detectives.
Time has not dampened the show's smart, honest writing by series
creators Danny Arnold and Theodore J. Flicker, among many others,
or the theater-quality acting of Linden and the talented cast,
which began with Abe Vigoda, Ron Glass, Max Gail, and Jack Soo
before adding Steve Landesberg and Ron Carey in season four. As
with other blue-collar "workplace" shows like M*A*S*H, Hill
Street Blues, and St. Elsewhere, viewers came to care about the
characters (real-life , in particular, applauded the show's
portrayal of working law officers) because they accurately
reflected the steady, unyielding stream of joys and heartbreak
that made up every day in a job where people's lives were at
stake, and how that experience affected the personalities that
worked there. Barney Miller was a rare series, one that has not
been duplicated (though emulated by shows like Rescue Me and
Homicide: Life on the Street) or, thankfully, remade, and this
impressive set from Shout Factory serves as its best and most
complete presentation to date.
Like the show itself, the extras on The Complete Series are
heartfelt and often hilarious. Series writer-producers Tony
Sheehan, Jeff Stein, and Frank Dungan, all of whom continued to
collaborate on series like Mr. Belvedere and King of Queens, are
featured on commentary tracks for the show's final three-part
episode, "Landmark," which concerned the closing of the 12th
Precinct. The commentaries are informal but informative--the
show's notorious late shoots and last-minute rewrites are
discussed--and often very funny. Stein and Dungan also appear on
a trio of overlapping making-of featurettes that additionally
include new interviews with Linden, Gail, and Vigoda. More
important to Miller completists will be the entire original
pilot, "The Life and Times of Captain Barney Miller," which aired
on an ABC comedy anthology series in 1974. Linden and Vigoda are
featured in a cast that includes Charles Haid (Hill Street Blues)
among the One-Two's detectives. The complete version of the
series pilot, "Ramon," which essentially tells the same story as
"Life and Times," is also included in an uncut version that adds
two minutes of footage. In addition, there's an excerpt from You
Don't Know Jack, a 2009 documentary about Jack Soo that includes
interviews with Landesberg and Gail about their well-loved fellow
actor whom the entire cast feted in a special 1979 episode
(included in the set). For many, the set's curiosity piece is the
first season of Fish, the short-lived spinoff series that
featured Vigoda's character riding herd on a quintet of foster
children (including Todd Bridges of Diff'rent Strokes). The 13
episodes included here are largely laugh-free affairs and the
complete antithesis to the intelligent comedy of Barney Miller.
Image quality on many episodes remains as murky as they appeared
on the three stand-alone DVD releases from Sony, though this is
the case with shows created on videotape rather than film. Such
issues, however, should not prevent fans and newcomers alike from
spending quality time with the men of the 12th Precinct. --Paul
Gaita
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Review
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Sure, sure, The Wire is awesome but if you want to see
a true-to-life TV show about the daily drudgery of work
that’s also funny, it's time to take a second look at Barney
Miller.…. Shout! Factory’s "Barney Miller: The Complete Series"
finally gives a classic its due, compiling every episode of the
show (plus the first season of the spinoff "Fish") and adding
commentary tracks, interviews and other goodies. --Los Angeles
Times, October 2011
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