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Category:    Home > Reviews > Comedy > Satire > British > Gangsters > Animation > Shorts > TV > Western > The New Adventures Of Fred & Barney: The Complete Series (1979/*both Hanna Barbera**)/San Antonio (1945/**all Warner Archive Blu-ray)

Fackham Hall (2026/Bleecker Street Blu-ray)/Lookin' Italian (1994/MVD/Severin Blu-ray)/Loopy De Loop: The Complete Collection (1959-65*/**)/The New Adventures Of Fred & Barney: The Complete Series (1979/*both Hanna Barbera**)/San Antonio (1945/**all Warner Archive Blu-ray)



Picture: B Sound: B-/B-/C+/B-/C+ Extras: C/C/D/D/C Main Programs: C/C/C+/C+/C+



PLEASE NOTE: The Loopy De Loop, New Adventures Of Fred & Barney and San Antonio Blu-rays are now only available from Warner Bros. through their Warner Archive series and can all be ordered from the link below.



Now for an odd mix of comedies...



Jim O'Hanlan's Fackham Hall (2026) is an often (necessarily?) crude send-up of the snobby Downton Abbey franchise and by association, the creator's equally revisionist Gilded Age. Some may feel the humor here is too obvious and overboard, but for those who really find those two annoying and more, might feel they have not gone far enough.


The cast of unknowns are good here, but I just wish the screenplay had a different and bolder approach to bashing those franchises, yet there's always another film to make. Even if you agree with me that it is not as funny as it could have been, you'll still be happy they went bonkers the way they did to bash what they bash. Now you can try it out for yourself.


Extras include Deleted Scenes.



Guy Magar's Lookin' Italian (1994) is an indie-produced curio that was meant to be some kind of Scorsese tribute of some kind, but has too much comedy (intended and not) to be exactly that (think Married To The Mob or Moonstruck, more or less) and is mostly a curio because this is the film Matt LeBlanc made before landing his huge hit TV series Friends.


He plays the nephew of a Mafia guy (Jay Acovone) who has retired from that life after a disastrous incident, but is not happy the nephew is getting involved with street gangs. So he goes 'uncle' to help him out, leading to other fiascos. Denise Richards makes her brief feature film debut, the great singer Lou Rawls steals scenes in his dramatic work here and all involved are trying to make this work. Too bad its ambition and trying to do too much backfires, but its interesting to see them try. Now this curio is restored and you can see for yourself.


Extras include Directin' Italian - Interview With Writer/Producer/Director Guy Magar

  • Archival Interview With Writer/Producer/Director Guy Magar

  • Archival Interview With Actor Jay Acovone

  • Archival Interview With Actor Matt LeBlanc

  • Archival Interview With Actress Stephanie Richards

  • Archival Interview With Actor Lou Rawls

  • Archival Interview With Actor John LaMotta

  • Q&A With Writer/Producer/Director Guy Magar And Actors Jay Acovone, Matt LeBlanc, Stephanie Richards And Ralph Manza From The 1994 Palm Springs International Film Festival

  • Inside Edition Exclusive Look

  • Behind The Scenes

  • Gag Reel

  • and an Original Theatrical Trailer



To go with their wave of HD upgrades to all their Hanna Barbera holdings, Warner Archive has decided to issue Loopy De Loop: The Complete Collection (1959-65) on Blu-ray after an apparently successful DVD release a few years ago. As I explained in the DVD review...


They have released ''every animated short cartoon Hanna Barbera made with their Big Good Wolf character they invented after leaving their home of MGM, where they made a name for themselves on Tom & Jerry. They cut a deal similar to what Disney had with Columbia Pictures that they would make, fund and own the shorts and Columbia would merely distribute them for a fee. It worked and the series ran for 6 years and 48 shorts. Loopy speaks French and is trying to establish wolves as fun-loving animals and not the predators they are portrayed as. This never works, to his sometimes cartoon-violent detriment.


The shorts can be repetitive and amusing, but never outright hilarious... Though not a great series, it is a key transitional one and as good as many of the much harsher, sillier, poorer shows of its ilk made today, so it is recommended for mostly young viewers.''


I stick by that, but add that seeing them much more clearly makes them more fun and pleasant to watch, which will especially apply to younger viewers. That makes this upgrade worth it.


There are no extras.



Hard to believe, but after 1966, there were no new episodes of any show about The Flintstones or The Rubbles despite endless syndication of the hit original series, TV specials and appearances of the characters in other TV shows (and not counting TV ads, et al) so the arrival of The New Adventures Of Fred & Barney: The Complete Series (1979) is all the more interesting. Ignoring the teen Pebbles & Bamm Bamm show, it tries to pick up were the classic original show left off. You can read more about it on Blu-ray at this link:


https://fulvuedrive-in.com/review/15800/Flintstones:+The+Complete+Series+(1960+-+1966*)/


We get 17 episodes over what was actually two seasons, with Henry Corden the new voice of Fred Flintstone and Gay Autterson voicing Betty Rubble, you can feel a slight difference and the new show cannot imitate the older style of the original show, too late to do the simpler approach and even color or film stocks. The shows are good for what they are, but add nothing new to the world of Bedrock, so you can see why they pulled the plug early.


Additionally, they had also done a very belated Jetsons season and that was somehow closer to the first series and its seasons, but this is not as close. Either way, the characters continue to show up in new projects all the time and fans (and children) will want to give this at least one look. Mel Blanc, Jean Vander Pyl, Janet Waldo, Don Messick and Barney Phillips add to the voicing fun.


There are sadly no extras.



Last but not least (exactly) is David Butler's San Antonio (1945) has Errol Flynn defending his cattle, et al, against thievery and more, in a comedy with action, a little romance and Technicolor luster where applicable. Alexis Smith is his co-star, Florence Bates and Tom Tyler are among the supporting cast, there is some money in the film and it is worth a look. It has far more comedy than I would have liked to the point it undermines the while thing, resulting in a film with too many missed opportunities. Its not Blazing Saddles either, but mostly plays like a one-off they tried once and never again.


Now you can judge for yourself, but Western fans are more likely to enjoy it than Comedy fans, the appeal of the starts notwithstanding. I also just found it not that memorable and little has changed in my mind about since I last saw it eons ago. I did appreciate how they restored it, which comes from the original nitrate 35mm three-strip negatives.


Extras include an Original Theatrical Trailer, Warner live-action short Frontier Days and Warner animated short Trap Happy Porky.



Now for playback performance, with all the images looking as good as they could possibly look in the format. The 1080p 2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image on Fackham Hall is not bad throughout and does a good job of looking like and mocking all the stuffy British productions it is out to insult. Could look a bit better in 4K maybe, but the DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix is slightly lacking, a little quiet and inconsistent, but as good as anything here.


The 1080p 1.85 X 1 digital High Definition image on Lookin' Italian can show its age, but has a surprise advantage by being shot entirely on Agfa 35mm full color negative movie film, which is a rarity and the company does not make movie film anymore, sadly. That gives it a different look versus any HD digital shoot, plus color negative from Fuji or Kodak. It will still seem a little familiar to Friends fans as fellow 'must see TV' hit Seinfeld had its first few seasons shot on the same color stock. The PCM 2.0 Stereo has Pro Logic-like surrounds, but was not a Dolby theatrical release, but mastered and issued in the inferior Dolby imitator Ultra Stereo. It plays back well enough, but expect subtle sonic limits, et al. It and the film will very likely never sound better than it does here.


The 1080p 1.33 X 1 digital High Definition image color transfers on the two animated sets looks really good, with Loopy a very notable improvement over its DVD edition from years ago. Unlike the original Flintstones Blu-ray set, Fred & Barney has lossless sound, but more on that below.


The 1080p 1.33 X 1 digital High Definition image transfer on San Antonio rarely shows the age of the materials used, originally issued on 35mm dye-transfer, three-strip Technicolor film prints that took advantage of the format and looks fine throughout. All three Warner Archive releases feature DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 2.0 Mono lossless mixes, with Loopy and San Antonio having weaker sound than one would have liked. However, Fred & Barney sounds pretty good lossless and that will make fans of the original show madder that its Blu-ray set was not with lossless sound. Fred & Barney will never sound better.



To order the Loopy De Loop, New Adventures Of Fred & Barney and/or San Antonio Warner Archive Blu-rays, go to this link for them and many more great web-exclusive releases at:


https://www.amazon.com/stores/page/ED270804-095F-449B-9B69-6CEE46A0B2BF?ingress=0&visitId=6171710b-08c8-4829-803d-d8b922581c55&tag=blurayforum-20



- Nicholas Sheffo


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