Babar: The Complete First Season (1989/E1 DVD Set)/The Happiest Baby/Toddler On The Block (Lionsgate DVDs)/Lancelot Link: Secret Chimp – Complete
Special Collector’s Edition (1970/Film Chest DVD set)/My First Collection V.3 w/Chicken Little (Scholastic DVD Box Set)
Picture: C/C/C/C+/C+ Sound: C+ Extras: D/C/C/C+/C+ Episodes: B-/B-/B-/C/B-
Here are
the latest children’s titles.
After
some singles, E1 has issued Babar: The
Complete First Season (1989) which is basically more of the same, but the
classic series is obviously popular enough as is the child-safe character. It is a nice set and the show is just fine,
so fans will likely want to go for this set and its likely follow-ups instead
of singles. There are no extras across
the two DVDs, but you can read more about the show at this link on one of the
singles we covered:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/11139/Babar:+Best+Friends+Forever+++Sc
In the
special interest category, Lionsgate has issued the latest titles on the best
way to make child care work. Whether I
actually agree with The Happiest Baby On
The Block and The Happiest Toddler
On The Block is another story as I found some of the advice suspect, so you
should only take these releases so seriously, but they at least get one to
think about the subject, which is a start.
Host Dr. Karp answers key questions on both volumes as their sole
extras.
At the
tail end of the spy craze of the 1960s, the somewhat bizarre Lancelot Link: Secret Chimp (1970) was
produced with various chimpanzees walking around being voiced over in a TV
series spy spoof that has a cult following, but I was never the biggest fan
of. This Complete Special Collector’s Edition comes from Film Chest and has
all 17 episodes (starting as hour long shows, the series became a half hour in
the end) over the first two DVDs and third and final DVD has extras as Lancelot
works for APE (a spoof of U.N.C.L.E.)
and battle CHUMP in all the shows.
Besides
being too late, it is a one-note gimmick show, but apes, chimps and monkeys
were the rage for some at the time thanks to the circus, their novelty and even
Tarzan. Lancelot and Mata Hairi (hairy, not Hair, get
it??? Do you want to?) also had a rock
band with a name to tick off many uptight people: The Evolution
Revolution. Points for the show there,
but the idea of using these animals were starting to peak, as proved by TV
series bomb Me & The Chimp with
Ted Wass (of That Girl fame) and a
decade later, the abomination that was NBC’s insane bomb Mr. Smith. See this one at
your own risk and know it is unusual at any rate, but it still deserves a DVD
release and has a solid one here.
Extras
include 17 vignettes from that band including the “Chimpies” from the show,
slideshow tied to the show from Allan Sandler and Life Magazine, separate
interviews with Producer Sandler and Musical Director Bob Emenagger, footage of
Link & Sandler at the Wildlife Waystation in 2011 and the Jeff Krulik/Diane
Barnard documentary “I Created Lancelot Link”.
Hope this
leads to the release of Curiosity Shop
from the same producers.
Finally
we have the latest Scholastic Storybook Treasures DVD box set, My First Collection V.3 w/Chicken Little,
a 3 DVD set including their recent take on the classic short story (inspired by
Disney no doubt) and 12 other shorts.
Little is joined by Great White
Man-Eating Shark, Three-Legged Cat
and Dooby Dooby Moo, while the Bark George disc has that short narrated
by John Lithgow, Dot The Fire Dog, Angus & The Ducks, Whistle For Willie and No Roses For Harry! The Katie
Loves Kittens disc also has Scaredy
Squirrel, Roberto The Insect
Architect and The Cow Who Fell In The
Canal.
There
might be occasional overlap with other releases in the series, many of which
are reviewed elsewhere on this site, but these are nice sets and ever
child-friendly. Extras include
read-alongs on all three discs, interviews with Rebecca & Ed Emberley on
the Little discs (the wrote and
illustrated this version) and Katie
author/illustrator John Himmelman and Squirrel
author/illustrator Mélanie Watt have their respective interview clips on that
disc.
The 1.33
X 1 image on Babar and the Block singles are softer than I would
have liked overall, finished on analog video, while the same on Lancelot and Little may not be perfect al the time, but look better and were
more to what I expected from them. All
have lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 sound with stereo in all cases but Lancelot as it is the oldest, but they
are all on par with each other, having their various flaws and limits.
- Nicholas Sheffo