Left: DVD (slipcase front). Right: Blu-ray (slipcase front). |
Left: DVD (slipcase back). Right: Blu-ray (Slipcase back). |
First up---- the Blu-ray version. Happily, ALL of the content from the Via Vision effort from 2020 is here, including the exclusive content (detailed in my previous post). There's nothing new, however---- so that "Tourist Attraction" track that Dave Schow and I did, along with the new track for "It Crawled Out of the Woodwork" by Tim Lucas (both detailed here) will languish in silence... for now.
So should you spring for it? Well, it's a helluva lot cheaper than the Via Vision version (not to mention much easier to acquire), and it's the only game in town if you want those exclusive commentaries and stuff. However (and this is a fairly critical however)--- you must be multi-region equipped, as Mediumrare's set is locked to Region B. I bought my first multi-region player about 10 years ago, and lemme tell ya--- it was life-changing. There are a couple of other caveats, which we'll get to in a bit.
On the standard-definition side of things, Mediumrare's DVD release is... well, interesting. The first 13 discs essentially mimic the Via Vision and Kino releases, but then they throw in a 14th disc with lots of extras that are otherwise only found on the Blu-rays (including some of those Aussie-exclusives you won't find on the domestic releases). Also on that 14th disc are Please Stand By (the original pilot) and The Unknown (the alternate version of "The Forms of Things Unknown") along with their attached commentaries. In fact, with this DVD edition, you get everything except the three exclusive Blu-ray commentaries and:Cliff Robertson – Full TNT Interview (36:00)
Joanna Frank – Full TNT Interview (21:02)
Casting Director Meryl O'Loughlin - TNT Interview (23:44)
Interview with Writer Anthony Lawrence (9:13)
It's that 14th disc that pushes Mediumrare to the front of the pack on the DVD front. However, its packaging is by far the most disappointing: a flimsy cardboard slipcase and one big fat plastic inner case (with those horrific hinged stacked-disc page-flippers inside). I wasn't surprised by this, truth be told... but I was shocked to discover that their Blu-ray (which again matches Via Vision's in terms of content) has THE IDENTICAL SHITTY PACKAGING. In fact, it's even the exact same size, but the sleeve art is smaller because apparently the Blu-ray logo has to be visible due to some Draconian BDA (Blu-Ray Disc Association) requirement.
Left: DVD (inner case front). Right: Blu-ray (inner case front). |
But it's what's inside that really counts, yes? What Mediumrare has done is made the contents of the unobtainable Australian Blu-ray available to the world, and bested all the other DVD releases at the same time.... that is, if you've got a multi-region player (or live in Region B). Other than the cheap packaging (and the region-locking, and the lack of booklets), they do deserve some measure of kudos.
But for me, Via Vision's Blu-ray set (in that glorious hard box) is still the one to beat. I've said it before: 2023 is the show's 60th anniversary, so there's still time for any of these three labels---- or perhaps some fourth as yet unknown entity--- to do something even more spectacular. Dave Schow and I (and our Commentary Crew cohorts) still have lots to say in the form of audio commentaries, and I'd love the opportunity to put together a video featurette on the home video history of the show too.
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