Ray Harryhausen - Ultimate Collector's Giftset - Buy from Amazon: DVD or Blu-ray and The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad
Three releases from the incomparable Ray Harryhausen hitting the home market this week, including his debut on High Definition. ... and there was much rejoicing.
The two options are the DVD, which includes three films, each with 2-disc sets, and a really awesome figure of Ymir, from 20 Million Miles to Earth. Or you can grab the Blu-ray, which has four movies, including The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad, which is also coming out on DVD separately.
The movies included are...
It Came from Beneath the Sea
A nuclear powered submarine is on its maiden voyage when disaster strikes and they are attacked by a giant octopus... with six tentacles. (Budget restraints forced them to trim two tentacles.) And this attack is only just the beginning.
Ray Harryhausen's first feature-length film, but not his best. He was still learning his art, and it is noticeable. Additionally, the rest of the movie can't live up to Harryhausen's special effects.
Extras on the 2-disc DVD include both the original Black & White version and the new colorized version, which doesn't look as bad as I feared, but I would still stick with the original. There is also an audio commentary track with Ray Harryhausen and three special effects artists, who do a great job of asking the right questions. There are also a few featurettes starting with Remembering "It Came From Beneath the Sea", which is a 22-minute retrospective. Next up is a 12-minute look at stop-motion animation. Next, Tim Burton sits down with Ray Harryhausen for a 27-minute long interview. This is especially fascinating, as Ray Harryhausen is without doubt a pioneer in stop-motion animation while Tim Burton is arguably the best know proponent of the technique today. (Although many would argue for Nick Park.) The final featurette is a 23-minute look at Mischa Bakaleinikoff, who composed some of the music for this movie, and the other two movies in this set. Finally, there are a few image galleries, including a look at the new comic book.
There are no additional extras on the Blu-ray, and the extras are not in high definition, but it is BD-Live enabled.
Earth vs. The Flying Saucers
Two scientists, a married couple, are the loan survivors after a misunderstanding sparks a war between the Earth and some flying saucers.
A low budget Sci-fi film that is an allegory of cold war paranoia that is more famous than It Came From Beneath the Sea, but its reviews are not better. Perhaps the Cold War paranoia hasn't aged well, or perhaps the flying saucers don't have the same personality as a giant octopus, and that's why it earned weaker reviews. However, I prefer this movie out of the two.
Extras again start with the option to watch the movie in the original Black & White or the Satan-inspired colorized version. (Okay, that's going overboard. While it doesn't quite look right, it isn't particularly bad either. Certainly a huge step up from previous attempts.) There is another audio commentary track, again with Ray Harryhausen and three special effects artists, which is great quality. The Hollywood Blacklist and Bernard Gordon is 30-minute featurette on the blacklisting that happened in Hollywood at the time, and how it affected one of the screenwriters of this movie. Remembering "Earth Vs. the Flying Saucers" is another retrospective, this time running 21 minutes. Interview with Joan Taylor is exactly what it sounds like, an interview with one of the stars, Joan Taylor. The final featurette is an 11-minute look at the newest colorization process. Granted, it does look a lot better than the early attempts, but I'm not entirely satisfied with the results. There are also the original credits without Bernard Gordon, as well as several image galleries.
Again, there are no additional extras on the Blu-ray, and the extras are not in high definition, but it is BD-Live enabled.
20 Million Miles to Earth
A rocket ship that was sent to explore Venus returns and crashes back to Earth off the coast of Sicily. The astronauts are rescued, but a specimen of Vesuvian life escapes and soon wrecks havoc. But is it a destructive beast, or just misunderstood?
Of the three films in the DVD Gift Set, this one is clearly the best. Ymir, the creature in question, has real character and emotion in Ray Harryhausen's work. On a side note, this movie kind of reminds me of Cloverfield; I wonder if it helped inspire that later flick.
The extras on this DVD are very similar to the DVDs above, and include both the Black and White and the colorized versions. There is also an audio commentary track with the same men as above, which includes a lot of information (although Ray Harryhausen admits a few times that he can't remember how a few things were done) and a 27-minute retrospective. Finally, there's an 11-minute look at the colorization process, a 27-minute interview with Tim Burton and Ray Harryhausen, a 17-minute interview with Joan Taylor, and a 23-minute featurette on Mischa Bakaleinikoff, all of which were on the other DVDs.
Again, there are no additional extras on the Blu-ray, and the extras are not in high definition, but it is BD-Live enabled.
The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad - Buy from Amazon
Also coming out this week is The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad, which is not part of the Ultimate Collector's Giftset on DVD, but is included on the Blu-ray box set.
This is easily the best and the most well known of the Ray Harryhausen films coming out this week; in fact, it is it is one of the most iconic fantasy films of all time.
Like the other films released this week, this one has plenty of extras starting with an audio commentary track, as well as a retrospective, which was also a feature common to the other releases. Next up is a 25-minute featurette on the legacy of Ray Harryhausen and a 27-minute featurette on composer Bernard Herrmann. The DVD also has two vintage featurettes, a 12-minute behind-the-scenes look, and a three-and-a-half minute look at the special effects. Finally, John Landis and Ray Harryhausen sit down for a 12 minute interview. Lesser features include a song made to promote the movie and a gallery of images.
Overall the Blu-rays offer no additional extras, and none of the extras are in high definition. (I don't count BD-Live as an extra, unless there's something additional, something related to the movie, that you can download.) However, the price is just 10% more, which is nothing. What I am upset about is the Ymir figurine, which is totally awesome, but can only be found with the DVD Giftset. Why not offer it with the Blu-ray Giftset as well? This is not the first time I've seen the DVD packaging far superior to the Blu-ray.
Ray Harryhausen's work in special effects was groundbreaking, and not just groundbreaking, but legendary. For those who have a Blu-ray player, the Blu-ray Giftset is certainly worth picking up. For those who don't, think about grabbing the DVD Giftset because that Ymir figure is just too damn awesome for words.