Review and Scans By Stu
Right from the bat when this was announced, I was leery about picking up this set. The first season
ranges from mediocre to poor and has very few bright spots, so sitting through them can become very
tedious, very quickly. Coupled with the fact that the set was difficult to find and barely announced
before it’s release, I simply skipped on it all together.
When it came to me actually needing the episodes for this very site, I caved in and bought the set.
Luckily, I found it a lot cheaper too. I paid just £14.99 for it. In case the £ sterling has confused
you, I’ll put it like this. I paid £15.99 for the two disc Batman Begins set. Make no mistake, this
was as cheap a set as they come, so the option is there if you’re curious about this season.
My main problem with the set was simple. 3 episodes a disc is nothing short of a disgrace,
especially when they previously announced the show would be available in separate and set releases.
In this day and age, there’s no excuse in the world for 3 episodes a disc treatment from a show that
has 52 whole episodes available. A full season across 4 discs is diabolically bad. To make matters
worse, there’s a terrible amount of interlacing on these discs, and the rest of the transfer is
nothing to write home about. Sound is perfectly fine but the real treat on this set is the features.
Whilst brief, I found these to very entertaining. I especially enjoyed the look at the designs of
the show and the interviews with the creators, and what they were trying to accomplish. Even cooler
was the rough sketches of unused designs before Gordon perfected what look he was planning to use,
I especially liked seeing some of the more comic inspired Shadowcat designs, especially as they were
based on such a laughably bad costume. It does make you appreciate what we ended up with a little
more, I can truthfully say.
The episode introductions were fun stuff, as the producers explain exactly what they were trying
to accomplish with each episode. This isn’t some 30 second clip either, they really managed to get
a lot out of them within the time frame. These were greatly missed on the later releases, which
didn’t have them for some strange reason.
Overall, some nice features sort of make up for a rather poorly done set. If you can get it cheap,
it’s worth it. If you can’t, it’s probably better left on the shelf. The fourth disc, the one this page
was put up for, is easily the best out of all of them.