Kolchak:
The Night Stalker - The Complete Series/Original 1974 - 1975 Season
(Region 4 PAL Import/Madman DVD Set/Australia)
Picture:
B- Sound: C+ Extras: C- Episodes: A-
PLEASE
NOTE:
This DVD set can only be operated on machines capable of playing back
DVDs that can handle Region Four/4 PAL format software and can be
ordered from our friends at Madman Entertainment at the website
address provided at the end of the review.
Also note that we
previously reviewed the Universal NTSC DVD release of the series and
you can read more about the show and that set at this link:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/2888/Kolchak:+The+Night+Stalker+(1974-7
Since
its release back in 2005, Universal Home Video's U.S. NTSC DVD set of
the classic Kolchak:
The Night Stalker
has been a big seller for a back title, is still in print, continues
to assure the show is rediscovered by old and new fans alike and
broadcasts on Universal's Chiller cable network have inspired further
interest. A PAL Region Two set in the U.K. with essentially the same
content and cover, has also sold well overseas. Now, Madman
Entertainment in Australia has issued the series, but it features
some interesting differences when compared to the Universal U.S. set.
For one thing, they
have decided to make five one-sided DVDs instead of the three
double-sided DVDs the U.S. set offers. There are more chapter stops
on each episode, but you cannot access them from the fun menus. The
prints have some differences, especially in picture and sound in
early shows and those who thought the U.S. set was too dark will want
to check this set out immediately if they have a multi-region DVD
player.
As
noted before,
the series resulted in the huge success of two telefilms: The
Night Stalker
(1972) and The
Night Strangler
(1973, now
on Blu-ray in the U.S., both reviewed as the now out-of-print double
feature from MGM elsewhere on this site).
As in those films, the late, great Darren McGavin played Carl
Kolchak, a once on-the-verge-of-big-time success and still-great
reporter who was almost one of the top newspapermen in the country.
He had fallen from grace years ago and in trying to get the next big
story, had been fired from many newspapers nationwide. No matter
what, whether it was police interference or threats from potential
subjects of his writing, Kolchak would stop at nothing to get all the
facts. It is not known how crazy this made his career up to the
early 1970s, but coming across a vampire in old Las Vegas changed his
life forever. He continues to get rehired by his old friend and
always editor Tony Vincenzo, played brilliantly by the late, great
Simon Oakland from the original TV movies to the end of this series.
Darren
McGavin is Carl Kolchak, a once on-the-verge-of-big-time success and
still-great reporter who was almost one of the top newspapermen in
the country. He had fallen from grace years ago and in trying to get
the next big story, had been fired from many newspapers nationwide.
No matter what, whether it was police interference or threats from
potential subjects of his writing, Kolchak would stop at nothing to
get all the facts. It is not known how crazy this made his career up
to the early 1970s, but coming across a vampire in old Las Vegas
changed his life forever. He continues to get rehired by his old
friend and always editor Tony Vincenzo, played brilliantly by the
late, great Simon Oakland from the original TV movies to the end of
this series.
Originally,
a third Kolchak telefilm called The
Night Killers
(which was just
published only recently) was planned where robots (or aliens) would
replace politicians or other figures of interest. Originally an
angle in the original 1967 Avengers
episode Never,
Never Say Die
with Christopher Lee, the idea soon came to fruition in the 1976 film
Futureworld
(the underrated sequel to Michael Crichton's 1973 hit Westworld,
the original feature film reviewed elsewhere on this site on Blu-ray)
was hinted at in the original Stepford
Wives
(1975) and surfaces in 1988 with a new sense of darkness in John
Carpenter's remarkable They
Live.
When
the show began, it was simply entitled Night
Stalker,
but Universal renamed it early on and the new title was Kolchak:
The Night Stalker,
reflected in newer credits. While Universal later replaced the
earlier episode's Night
Stalker-only
credits with the newer, longer title on many prints and the U.S.
DVDs, Madman has actually retained the original titles on the
earliest shows. As a result, the first two episodes also have sound
effects with a slightly different version of the instrumental theme
song that has shown up on TV theme CD compilations. Then the old
Night
Stalker-only
title plays with the revised instrumental theme song minus the sound
effects starting on the third show. Finally, that theme minus sound
effects is retained with the new titles and they are what appear on
the rest of the show and all 20 U.S. DVDs. Those differences alone
make this set as collectible as the Universal set.
For the benefit of all
our readers, here again is our episode guide so you can see what you
are missing or should see again. Note these PAL Australian edition
prints do not use the alternate U.K. titles noted below after their
original U.S. titles:
The
Ripper
- This debut episode went for the infamous Ripper, somehow alive and
stalking the streets of Chicago three quarters of a century later.
The great Beatrice Colen plays Jane Plumm, a terrific, neurotic
reporter for a rival news publication that is a bit more of what we
now know as a tabloid. She quickly went on to play Etta Candy in
the Lynda Carter Wonder
Woman
series for ABC. The tone of the show is remarkable and though they
had less time than a telefilm, Rudolph Borchert's teleplay and Allen
Baron's directing made for the perfect launch of the series.
The
Zombie
- Sopranos
creator David Chase was the story consultant for the series and
co-story editor with Borchert wrote a quarter of all the teleplays
for the show and this was the first. Needless to say, it involves
organized crime. Italian mobsters are being killed off in gruesome
ways that are not typical of gangland-style or execution-style
killings. Black numbers operators are suspected, but it turns out a
Jamaican man the Italians killed has come back from the dead.
Kolchak has to find out who is pulling his strings before he becomes
the next victim. This show introduced a regular that lasted (John
Fiedler as Gordon ''Gordy The Ghoul'' Spangler) and one that sadly
did not (the late Carol Ann Suzi (the unseen mother on Big
Bang Theory)
as Monique Marmelstein noted cut scenes which may still be in the
vaults for this episode!), and also features Charles Aidman, Joseph
Sirola, Val Bisoglio, J. Pat O'Malley, Antonio Fargas and Scatman
Crothers in great supporting roles. Directed by Alex Grasshoff.
They
Have Been, They Are, They Will Be
- Also known as U.F.O.,
this is one of the most underrated shows in the series. Dead
animals are turning up dead in a bizarre manner. When humans are
next, Kolchak has to figure out why, starting with what made a ton
of lead disappear and police go flying (minus any sound as if in a
vacuum) before the situation gets worse. Melle's music is
exceptional and has leisurely stretches that are very rare even in
television today. The show was combining comedy and horror in a way
never done before, but this was an existential layer even the
telefilms were missing. James Gregory, Mary Wickes and Dick Van
Patten guest star. Borchert and
Baron
build on their success with the first show.
The
Vampire
- Sometimes confused as being the pilot, this is a terrific sequel
to the pilot, as Vegas authorities missed one body for cremation, a
female prostitute. She comes to Los Angeles and when Kolchak hears
about it, gets a benign assignment just to go out there and tie up
loose ends. Kathleen Nolan, William Daniels, Jan Murray, Larry
Storch and Suzanne Charny co-star. Chase adapted Bill Stratton's
story with Don Weis directing another classic show.
The
Werewolf
- Chase and early series producer Paul Playdon came up with this
terrific winner about Kolchak going on the last voyage of a cruise
ship, only to find out a werewolf is on board killing the
passengers. The love boat turned death boat as Bernardt Stieglitz
(Eric Braeden) does what he can to stop himself from transforming,
but it will take some quick thinking by Kolchak to stop his more
barbaric half. Henry Jones, Dick Gautier, Jackie Russell, Barry
Cahill and an especially hilarious Nita Talbot guest star. Directed
by Allen Baron.
Firefall
- Also known as The
Doppelganger,
this is the first of four shows pulled from future broadcast for
reasons we'll explain later, but is a disturbing show about the
ghost of a former gangster (teleplay by Bill S. Ballinger this time)
trying to reenter the world of the living by taking over living
bodies. Instead, spontaneous combustion cremates each of them on
sight and the famous conductor Ryder Bond (Fred Beir) is the next
big target. Kolchak has discovered that all the victims were asleep
when they were engulfed, so he is in for a deadly, long night. Very
underrated work by Don Weis and Carol Ann Suzi's last appearance as
Monique.
The
Devil's Platform
- Tom Skerritt is the title character, a devil worshiper who has
made a deal that allows him to cheat death and eliminate his more
popular and able competition. Here's a way to fix an election no
one has used lately! Jeanne Cooper and Stanley Adams guest star in
this Donn Mullally teleplay that involved several writers and was
nicely directed by Allen Baron.
Bad
Medicine
- Also know as The
Diablero,
Richard Kiel is the title monster and Native American legend (and
more noticeably so in the first of two monster appearances in a row)
who goes around stealing wealth, changing into a variety of animals
and killing his victims or anyone else who gets in his way. In this
case, it is the rich, elderly elite of Chicago. Though Kiel's Bond
appearances have dated the show in odd ways, it has plenty of creepy
moments, great sound design and more unforgettable moments. Alex
Grasshoff directed.
Spanish
Moss Murders
- With a Science Fiction edge, a sleeping experiment brings the
legendary Boogie Man to life, known as the Cajun horror Peremalfait.
Kolchak investigates, which leads him to a lab run by a clever
doctor (Severn Darden) who is at first also oblivious to what is
going on. Keenan Wynn is outstanding as the annoyed Captain Joseph
Siska, who knowns Kolchak all too well, and Richard Kiel is great as
the swamp monster. The climax of the show is also another classic,
written by Al Friedman with Chase, based on Friedman's original
story. Gordon Hessler, so good at directing this genre in film,
helmed this show memorably.
The Energy Eater
- Also known as Matchemonedo,
this second of four shows pulled from future broadcast has four
writers (teleplay by Arthur Rowe and Rudolph Borchert) involves
people being electrocuted to death under strange circumstances. The
catch is that they all died at a hospital that was just built on
sacred Native American ground, which is suddenly having all kinds of
trouble with its electric. Though it is uneven at times, the Native
American elements do not date as badly as Bad
Medicine
and the last of director Alex Grasshoff's works has more interesting
moments and twists that work. The guest cast includes William
Smith, Elaine Giftos, Marvin Kaplan (as a corrupt barber), Robert
Yuro and even Joyce Jillson before she gave up acting.
Horror In The
Heights
- This episode is also known as The
Rakshasa.
Considered by many to be the peak of the series, written by Hammer
Horror veteran and great genre writer James Sangster, this classic
involves a creature that can manipulate the mind of its victims
before literally engulfing them by tearing and consuming their
flesh. In one of the greatest twists of the series, this takes
place in a neighborhood of elderly and often-Jewish residents, so
the sudden appearance of Swastikas at first suggest hate crimes.
However, the true source is The Rakshasa, an evil Hindu monster who
especially shows up in times of crisis. This increases its chances
of victims to feed on. Kolchak has to cut through the anti-Semitism
and other unusual problems before its too late. Michael T. Caffey
did a great job directing this one, which is one of the great shows,
with a cast that includes Phil Silvers, Benny Rubin, Abraham Soafer,
Murray Matheson, Barry Gordon and Shelley Novack.
Mr. R.I.N.G.
- At a time when Bell Telephone was a monopoly and there were
problems unfolding with U.S. Government policy, this great, creepy
show (written by L. Ford Neale & John Huff) has the provocative
title that makes it sound like the title character is an insider,
but it turns out to be a self-sufficient robot and not one
controlled by a darker force. Not dating too badly, this
intelligent show once again involves Kolchak facing the worst
possible forces, monsters and organizations. Julie Adams, best
known for being the target of The
Creature From The Black Lagoon
in that classic, is appropriately the wife of the creator of the
robot. Corrine Michaels, Bert Freed, Robert Easton and Henry
Beckman co-star in this gutsy show directed by Gene Levitt.
Primal
Scream
- This episode is also known as The
Humanoids,
in what is the last of a little-acknowledged storyline of Kolchak
taking on the federal government. A new series of brutal murders
starts with a scientist, then spreads to all over Chicago. Despite
more comedy, there is darkness like nothing before or after this
show would feature. An oil conglomerate is also involved and the
''ownership'' of a missing link is at stake. John Marley, Pat
Harrington, Katharine Woodville, Regis J. Cordic, Barbara Rhodes,
Jeanie Bell and Jamie Farr co-star in this Robert Scheerer-directed
show co-written by Bill S. Ballinger and David Chase.
The Trevi
Collection
- Kolchak's underhanded friend Mickey Patchek (Chuck Waters) has him
meet in Chicago's fashion district. Before Kolchak can get the
information to be offered, Mickey ''falls'' to his death from atop a
building, though its window. When he decides to investigate, he
discovers the fashion season is loaded with unexpected carnage and
someone on the runway is a killer witch. A fine episode with a
great cast including Nina Foch, Lara Parker, Marvin Miller and
Bernie Kopell. Rudolph Borchert wrote and Don Weis directed. Also
remembered for its classic use of mannequins.
Chopper
- This episode turned out to be the first-ever professional sale of
a script by future feature film hitmakers Bob Gale and Robert
Zemeckis, focusing on revenge and bike gangs. Years ago, a young
and now defunct bike gang accidentally beheaded (or ''chopped'' of
the head) of one of their members. They broke up then and there,
vowing never to discuss the matter and were never sought out or
charged with murder. However, the victim has not and had returned
headless in his leather and denim, riding a vintage chopper
motorcycle, and wielding a sword to return the favor at top speeds.
More comical than intended due to some dated visual effects, it is
still effective enough and has its won classic moments. Steve
Fisher and David Chase wrote the final teleplay with Gale and
Zemeckis, directed well enough by Bruce Kessler. The guest cast
includes Sharon Farrell, Larry Linville, Frank Aletter, Jesse White
and Jim Backus.
Demon In Lace
- The third of four shows pulled from individual rebroadcast after
the show ended was written by Stephen Lord, with a final teleplay by
Lord, Chase and Michael Kozoll, involving male college students
suddenly dying of heart attacks. However, they are all in great
health and there is no medical reason for their deaths. It turns
out a professor (Andrew Prine) has brought an ancient tablet back
that has demonic implications attached. In this case, it is a
Succubus, who feeds on the life energy of her male victims. It uses
dead (or newly killed) female students to get to the males, so
Kolchak has to stop it before the campus is wiped out! Directed by
Don Weis, in the last of his great work for the show, the episode
co-stars Keenan Wynn back as Capt. Siska, Kristina Holland, Jackie
Vernon, Ben Masters, Donald Mantooth, Carmen Zapata and Caroline
Jones as The Registrar.
Legacy Of Terror
- Also known as Lord
Of The Smoking Mirror,
this is the last of four shows pulled from individual rebroadcast
after the show ended, though this one is such a hoot as you are
about to find out. An Aztec Cult is on the loose and they are
cutting out the hearts of their victims, but leaving them behind in
a pattern based on some kind of numerology. Kolchak investigates
when one of the victims is a Vietnam hero, but things get worse. It
turns out they are making sub-sacrifices on track to the ultimate
sacrifice. They need a perfect and well-treated subject to being a
very powerful Aztec Mummy Nanautzin to life to take over the world.
That final sacrifice will be Pepe Torres, played by a then-unknown
Erik Estrada! If that was not enough, Sorrell ''Boss Hogg'' Booke
is taxidermist Mr. Eddy! Though funny intentionally and
unintentionally, some of the series creepiest moments are included.
Arthur Rowe wrote the teleplay Don McDougall directed here, making
for a show everyone will be talking about thanks to this set all
over again, particularly clever in dealing with certain aspects of
Vietnam without letting that interfere with the creepy story one
bit. The guest cast also includes Ramon Bieri, Pippa Scott and
Victor Campos and has one of the great surprise endings of the
series.
The Knightly
Murders
- If it was bad enough to build a hospital on sacred Native American
ground, what about using sacred ground to replace a museum that
resides on it with a discotheque? Bad idea! That is what is
exactly planned, until all connected with the project are brutally
murdered in remarkable ways. When Kolchak looks more closely into
the case, he suspects the museum's resident Black Knight has come to
life and is out to keep his home as is. Vincent McEveety directed
this show with more of an offbeat sensibility than a Horror genre
show would be, but it still has some great moments via the
Kozoll/Chase teleplay. John Dehner, Hans Conreid and Lucille Benson
make for a fine guest cast.
The Youth Killer
- Dating turns deadly when clients start turning up dead. No one
can tell who they are, because they have aged to death and are
unrecognizable. They were all part of the new electronic dating
service Max Match, run by Helen Surtees (Cathy Lee Crosby), but when
Kolchak shows a picture of her to a Greek friend of his
(Demosthenes), he is certain she is really Helen Of Troy! At this
point, the lighter side of the show that was starting to set in took
over in these last few shows, but the interesting and even
innovative ideas kept on coming. Dwayne Hickman, Kathleen Freeman,
Joss White and TV Captain
America
Reb Brown co-star in this Rudolph Borchert-penned teleplay, directed
by Don McDougall.
The
Sentry
- The final show has McGavin's real life wife Kathie Browne butting
heads with him as the only female police opponent he would have in
the series, something that never happened in the telefilms either.
People are being killed deep in the underground vaults of a
corporate archive and Kolchak is just dying to find out. He may get
his wish, depending on how fast he can get one of their golf carts
to go when the alligator/crocodile-like monster comes to get him in
those tunnels. More humor than expected, but like all the shows,
some great funny moments, followed by moments of amazing horror.
Neale & Huff wrote the final teleplay, directed by Seymour
Robbie. The guest cast also includes Albert Paulsen, Frank
Campanella, Margaret Avery and Tom Bosley.
To
repeat points made in the liner notes in the inside of the three
sleeves Madman has included as the sole extra of this set and I noted
in my older review, the show was supposed to run 22 episodes for the
season, but McGavin and later producer Cy Chermak (who replaced Paul
Playdon after the initial episodes and some other key work for the
series; Francy is Chermak's company, not McGavin's despite what has
been reported and how much McGavin and his wife Kathy Browne worked
to make the show a hit; the only error in the new essay) could not
get along and as the show became lighter, the ratings were not as
strong as reruns in later years and video sales would prove to be.
The show was on at 10 P.M. EST on ABC, then the reruns in 1975 were
moved to 8 P.M. the same night when the network moved The
Six Million Dollar Man
to Sundays. They had to be edited slightly, but that was all.
Ratings did not improve and the show was cancelled. That also meant
the end of seeing other regular characters Ron Updyke (played by Jack
Grinnage) and Miss Emily (one time Edith) Cowles (played by Ruth
McDevitt). The Independent News Service was finished and even comic
book and novel revivals put the company out of business. You can
read more about the failed revivals in the previous review.
So now it comes down to
how much better the performance of this set is or is not versus the
Universal set. There are improvements in this new PAL set simply
because the prints are showing area the U.S. NTSC set is not, but
then it is also missing picture area that set has. Those who did not
like the new bombastic Universal logo before each episode will be
happy to know that only opens each disc and all these prints have the
original MCA-TV endings.
The
1.33 X 1 full color, PAL, full frame image varies throughout as was
the case in the original set. Despite different openings early and
the original MCA ends on each print, you can tell the footage is
otherwise from the same sources. A badly spliced jump cut when
Kolchak first meets Carol Ann Suzi's Monique in The
Zombie,
the missing final words from the radio on The
Vampire
when Kolchak finishes checking into the hotel. These are even a
little softer than the U.S. NTSC transfers, yet they also have some
things going for them that make this set worth owning. For one
thing, these are brighter prints and more than a few critics
complained (overdoing it, to be blunt) that all the transfers we too
dark. Not true, but they may be darker in some ways than expected.
As previously noted,
the series had some of the most elaborate and expensive nighttime
shooting in TV history, set bound or not and you can see that as
clearly as ever in these PAL versions. This is again especially
apparent in the early episodes, which remain some of the darkest and
best nighttime shooting in television history. The catch to this was
that the nighttime stocks tend to be grainier and you can see that in
each episode. Sometimes, the footage is slightly dull, other times
color is slightly faded, but the color is much more often vibrant and
detailed as expected from the remastering. The result is warmth that
has never been seen before in the shows, plus there are no scratches
or artifacts and remains in these PAL transfers.
The other great benefit
is in color. Already, this is one of the greatest color film
productions in TV history in ways it never gets credit for, but these
new PAL DVDs confirm that. The PAL discs offer brighter whites,
black that is richer without the whole image being darkened and
colors like blur, red (important for blood) and unique color and
color combinations are better than the NTSC U.S. set. It makes for a
nice change of pace and almost worth taking the step backwards from
the NTSC U.S. set for these improvements, but the NTSC U.S. set is
still more photorealistic, detailed and refined just the same. There
is less color fading here, while grain is not as noisy, partly from
lack of detail.
As
noted in the previous review, cinematographer Donald Peterman shot
the first episode and made it very visually effective, even inspiring
the look for the first episodes of Millennium
(reviewed elsewhere on this site) and setting the tone for the best
this show offered visually. Alric Edens, A.S.C., shot the second
show and added to the vocabulary and feel of Kolchak's Chicago.
Eduardo Ricci shot the third episode, which has some chilling slow
motion work and creepy uses of the zoom lens. Ronald W. Browne took
over for the rest of the series and continued to make it visually
interesting and exceptional, though as the scripts got lighter, so
did the visuals.
The
sound is once again in lossy Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono, but this time,
that differs more so than the picture from the NTSC U.S. set. You
get more background noise and hiss than the older set, but that step
backwards means that music, sound effects and even dialogue are
clearer. That does not always mean cleaner and there is distortion
here that never turns up on the Universal set. However, it is an
alternative set of mixes some fans may prefer. I liked it just
because it was different from the NTSC U.S. set and wish both
soundtracks appeared here ala what Criterion just allowed on the
Blu-ray and DVD versions of Alain Resnais' Last
Year At Marienbad
(1961 and a MUST SEE) where the director included an ''unrestored''
version of the original soundtrack because he felt the cleaned-up
versions even Criterion was doing cut into the original audio. That
is what this PAL set's sound is like, despite some flaws.
To repeat myself yet
again, the series always had an interesting mix of location taping,
sound effects audio, in-studio dubbing and looping, plus
exceptionally recorded, engineered and recorded music. Unlike
previous video versions of the series, you can hear the differences,
with some audio sounding remarkably good for an old TV series. Some
of the audio has intended echo that makes the sound almost
stereophonic and as a huge fan, hope the sound is upgraded to
optional 5.1 mixes whenever a Blu-ray set arrives. The music masters
are in a Universal vault and such upgrades may be possible if CD
versions of the theme are any indication.
Gil
Melle's theme song (offered in two versions in this PAL set as noted
above) was partly derived from the theme to the 1974 Gene Roddenberry
TV movie The
Questor Tapes,
and was already on the map with the theme to the Rod Serling series
Night
Gallery
and also did the score one of the first three Six
Million Dollar Man
telefilms, for Larry Cohen's controversial 1972 theatrical film Bone
and the 1971 Andromeda
Strain,
often sited as the first all-electronic score for a motion picture.
Melle had helped to invent the drum machine and was exceptionally
aware of sound and the coming of new kinds of music, which is why his
music for Kolchak
holds up so well.
Melle
left the series after the fourth episode and felt it might be
lightening up too much. The great Jerry Fielding took over for
virtually the rest of the series, while Melle was sometimes still
credited when his music was reused. Greg McRitchie, one of the best
film and TV music orchestrators in the business, did the 11th
show on his own, but that was the only exception. Hal Mooney added
music for episode 9, while Luchi De Jesus added scoring for episode
10. I should add that Universal Television was as state of the art
as any TV production operation in their time and the high quality we
have here thirty years later has much to do with that. Even for fans
who have seen the show dozens of times before, the jokes and jolts
have a whole new life as a result of this high fidelity combination.
The
only extra we get is the essay over three paper sleeves as seen in
the interior of each case. Again, one extra Madman & Universal
could have included for kicks are to show what happened to the
withheld episodes above. They were cut into two artificial TV
movies, with some new voice-overs by McGavin and Oakland to tie the
show together. Crackle
Of Death
combined shows 6 & 10 into a tale that could have been dubbed
''deaths-a-poppin'', while The
Demon & The Mummy
crossed shows 16 & 17 with an ending too silly to believe.
Ironically, they are the last times either actor would portray those
classic characters, if only in voice. Perhaps NBC/Universal thought
that was repetitious, but that is still a good idea as far as I am
concerned. Grinnage is the last surviving cast member, plus Cy
Chermak, David Chase, Robert Zemeckis, Bob Gale and many of the guest
stars are still with us. Interviews and audio commentaries would
have also been nice. The paperboard case skips the metallic inks of
its NTSC U.S. set counterpart, but has a nice alternate design with
raised back letters on the logo on the front of the slipcase and has
three slendercases for its DVDs as well.
Even
with that said, this new PAL Region 4 DVD set of Kolchak:
The Night Stalker
is a must-have for serious fans and collectors. It might also be the
last time we see the older early prints turn up anywhere before the
Blu-ray edition is inevitably issued.
As noted above, you can
order this PAL DVD import set exclusively from Madman at:
https://www.madman.com.au/actions/channel.do?method=view
- Nicholas Sheffo
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