Charlie Brown Specials
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I have the original christmas show and It's Christmastime Again, both of which are highly enjoyable. I have not seen the other two mentioned, but I'd like to see I Want A Dog For Christmas because I like Rerun. In the comics at least, Snoopy happily plays with Rerun often, so if you think about it Rerun doesn't need to get his own dog because he has Snoopy.
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Peanuts Properties Pulled from Paramount, Goes to Warner & Announces 2 Remastered DVDs -- Yay, I'm very exited about this! Hopefully box sets will follow.
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Warner's hope is to dump all the "lesser" specials in boxset toon-collections for bulk sale, after the proven holiday sellers.Daniel wrote:Peanuts Properties Pulled from Paramount, Goes to Warner & Announces 2 Remastered DVDs -- Yay, I'm very exited about this! Hopefully box sets will follow.
(And you wouldn't think 'It's Arbor Day, CB" would be one of the better specials, but...)
Which is more generosity than Paramount ever showed them--
Now, maybe we can have a hope of seeing "Race For Your Life" and "Bon Voyage, CB" on disk.
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Actually, Peanuts are United Feature Syndicate, the other comic-strip guys (or United Media, now that they handle the Schulz licenses), the home of Garfield and Cathy.Ben wrote:Hmmm King Features...
I'd bet we're going to see a lot more from the WB/KFS relationship from now on. Popeye opened the floodgates!
(Unless Fox still owns the Garfield cartoon/movies.)
But yeah, Randall got the point: Paramount and Universal were two of the last companies you could trust for vintage-extras boxsets, and even without Warner, it's like the liberation of Paris--
It's just gravy that Warner's gotten confident that they can make any cartoon look good on a 4-disk set...And as long as they think "It's Non-Holiday Filler, Charlie Brown" is some "liability" that they don't know how to package, and have to resort to bulk-boxset-with-extras to foist it off on the public, so much the sweeter.
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I know, I feel the same way. Shame, really.
I also agree with Rand about the Paramount situation, which is pretty much why I'm exited. Paramount was ok, but the treatment... was as Charlie Brown would say "ughhh". Releasing them slowly, not really cleaning them up, cheap packaging, etc. It was just ridiculous.
I also agree with Rand about the Paramount situation, which is pretty much why I'm exited. Paramount was ok, but the treatment... was as Charlie Brown would say "ughhh". Releasing them slowly, not really cleaning them up, cheap packaging, etc. It was just ridiculous.
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Paramount just had no idea what to do with good ol' Charlie Brown. They have no classic animation department looking after this stuff, and don't seem to care. The specials were just basically tossed out there. Paramount was ignorant of how these could have sold if they had gone after the collectors market instead of only catering to the Wal*Mart crowd. As a big Schulz fan, I'm very excited to see what WB will do.
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Here's an interesting article, that sheds a little more light on this situation.
Like this for instance:
And this little bit:
Like this for instance:
Its pretty much what Eric already told us, but still, its great news!Other "Peanuts" programs that aren't as familiar will be packaged in "golden collection" sets similar to what Warner has done with its "Looney Tunes" library. "These will be for the core collector," Brown said. "Much of this content has never been out before on DVD."
And this little bit:
Cool. Thus far, I've really enjoyed all the new specials, so here's hoping the next ones don't dissapoint!Warner also will produce original "Peanuts" features for home video release under the studio's Warner Premiere label, Brown said. "We have no announcement date yet," he said, "but it's already been initiated. This will be a high priority."
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Think the series may have burned itself out trying to do the Saturday-morning series (which also just transcripted four-panel shorts).Daniel wrote:Cool. Thus far, I've really enjoyed all the new specials, so here's hoping the next ones don't dissapoint!
The new comic-transcript specials are....okay, but that last Schulz-written "Pied Piper" special was just plain weird:
No jokes to speak of, and scenes that kept dragging on in limbo for full minutes after the punchline ended, as if someone forgot the camera was still running.
That it turned out to be his last "pure" Peanuts special makes sense in context, but remember wondering whether senility was starting to set in on the author.
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To be honest, I've never seen "Pied Piper". Is it that weired?
I was mainly referring to "Christmas Tales" "I Want a Dog For Christmas" and "Lucy Must Be Traided" all of which IMO, come close to capturing the originals spark. Although, they each have their own shortcomings, like the harassment deal in Dog.
I was mainly referring to "Christmas Tales" "I Want a Dog For Christmas" and "Lucy Must Be Traided" all of which IMO, come close to capturing the originals spark. Although, they each have their own shortcomings, like the harassment deal in Dog.