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| Dvdivas
was founded by John Gabbard in 2000. It's purpose has been and
remains to be to provide you, the entertainment community with
the latest dvds and movie reviews. It will continue to be your
link to the most popular dvd movies. |
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“Quantum
Leap: The Complete Third Season“
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Reviewed
by: |
Wayne A. Klein |
| Genre: |
Science Fiction
|
| Video: |
1.33:1 Full
screen |
| Audio: |
Dolby Digital
5.1 |
| Languages |
English |
| Subtitles |
English,
Spanish, French |
| Length |
17 hours
|
| Rating |
NR |
| Release Date |
5/10/05
|
| Studio |
Universal
Home Video |
| Commentary:
|
None |
| Documentaries:
|
None |
| Featurettes:
|
None |
| Filmography/Biography:
|
None |
|
Interviews: |
None |
| Trailers/TV
Spots: |
Previews |
| Alternate/Deleted
Scenes: |
None |
| Music
Video: |
None |
| Other:
|
Episode Episode
synopsis, episode listing |
| Cast
and Crew: |
Scott Bakula,
Dean Stockwell, Debbie Allen, Josei Bissett, Patrick Warburton,
Tia Carrere, Andrea Thompson |
| Written
By: |
Donald P.
Bellisario, Chris Ruppenthal, Ed Scharlach |
| Produced
By: |
Donald P.
Bellisario, Deborah Pratt |
| Directed
By: |
Chris Ruppenthal,
Ivan Dixon, Stuart Margolin |
| Music:
|
Velton Ray
Bunch |
| The
Review: |
Warning: Review may have different
words from the original written version but we won’t tell
you this except in really, tiny print that’s too difficult
to read.
If Sam Beckett had been able to
truly leap back through time during his life time he would
have been able to foresee the licensing agreement issues that
prevent his TV series from having the original music in it
and prevented it from being replaced. Why is the music important?
The writers/producers/directors used music from each era to
help set the mood, tone and sometimes provide dramatic payoff.
While I can forgive a series NOT having extras, I can’t forgive
replacing music for key episodes and then putting the warning
in small print on the bottom of the box where viewers will
likely miss it. Universal may be providing that disclosure
but they also need to be up front about it bolding it so that
viewers aren’t deceived. ***
That pet peeve aside (and this
is an issue that doesn’t just dog Universal releases), “Quantum
Leap” hit its stride during the third season. The show had
dramatic episodes just as powerful as season three but this
was the most consistent season for this classic TV series.
During the third season Sam leaps into a KISS type rock star
(complete with dramatic make up and with Scott Bakula doing
his own singing!); into himself at 16 where he must change
an event in his own past; Sam also leaps into a Navy Seal
in Vietnam serving under his older brother where Sam faces
a unique dilemma. Is Sam there to save the life of his older
brother (who is fated to die the next day), insure the success
of the mission or for some other mysterious reason? While
“Quantum Leap” could occasionally be trite and seem rote,
the series at its best managed to convey the best elements
of draa; Sam never knows why he’s there and what he has to
correct which leads to many emotionally powerful and genuine
feeling moments during the third season. What brought the
best episodes home were the performances by the series two
mainstay performers the marvelous Scott Bakula (“Enterprise”)
and acerbic Dean Stockwell as Al who appears only as a hologram
and must guide Sam with information from the future. ---
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| Image
and Sound: |
Aside from
an occasionally grainy or soft episode, “Quantum Leap” looks
exceptional here. While there are still analog flaws in the
form of occasional dirt and irregularities in the prints used,
the colors are bright, image quality sharp and vivid (with the
exception of those episodes using stock footage). The 2.0 stereo
soundtrack also sounds quite crisp and vivid. Dialogue is, for
the most part, very clear and the music comes across with nice
presence. |
| The
Extras: |
I was hoping
that Sam would figure out how to hide some extras from the
past for Universal to find when transferring this to DVD.
We get an episode guide on disc three that lists which episodes
are on which discs (which might be an extra if it served any
useful purpose such as having trivia about each episode).
We get an onscreen synopsis for each episode before playing
the episode and a synopsis on the back of each slimline DVD
holder. The big difference here is the redesigned packaging.
Gone are the accordion holders which threatened to scratch
the dual layered, dual sided discs for each season. Instead,
we get individual slimline holders for each disc along with
a synopsis on the back of the holder giving a brief description
of each episode (much like the DVD version included as well).
Missing, however, are some of the promo photos that adorned
the accordion tyle holders. I miss them. It’s a pity that
Universal chose not to adorn the inside of the paper sleeves
in each slim line holder with photos for the inside. It does
appear that these are the uncut original episodes as they
aired on NBC.
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| Commentary:
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This is an
area where Universal continues to lag behind just about every
studio. Would it have hurt Universal to provide commentary by
Scott Bakula (particularly since he recently filmed a cameo
for the new “Quantum Leap” TV show), Dean Stockwell (he appears
in the new show as a regular) or even creator Bellisario? “The
Leap Home” parts 1 and 2 would have been a perfect set for commentary
tracks. --- |
| Final
Words: |
“Quantum
Leap” continues to look nice in its DVD transfer but it seems
that Universal is rushing out “product” which really does a
disservice to the fans. This particularly set was designed to
coincide with the release of “Enterprise” on DVD and the last
two episodes of “Enterprise” airing on UPN. Synergy can be everything
but it can also add up to nothing particularly when “product”
is rushed out to meet a predestined release date or tie in.
Universal, please do it right for the last two sets of the series.
This fine series and its fans deserve better. |
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