
Editorial Review:
Product Description
A&E Home Video proudly presents world-renowned producer Gerry Anderson's seminal 1970's sci-fi adventure series...SPACE: 1999. Set 6 invites you to ESCAPE INTO WORLDS BEYOND BELIEF with the lost men and women trapped on Earth's Moon when it was blasted from Earth orbit in the year 1999. This is their story, and your one-way ticket to adventure.Witness the excitement of SPACE: 1999 as never before: Digitally remastered for a superior DVD presentation from the original 35mm elements UNCUT, with as much as 12 minutes of additional footage not seen in areas of the U.S. during original broadcast release! Combining elements of Science Fiction Adventure and Fantasy SPACE: 1999 has claimed a worldwide following finding a life beyond its titled date, securing its place in the 21st century and beyond.This international cast includes Martin Landau (Academy Award® Winner, Ed Wood) and Barbara Bain (3 time Emmy® Winner, Mission Impossible), Catherine Schell (007 On Her Majesty's Secret Service) and European guests Guy Rolfe (Nicholas and Alexandra) and Sarah Douglas (Superman I & II). With cinema styled special effects by Brian Johnson (Academy Award® winner, Alien, The Empire Strikes Back) SPACE: 1999 premiered to TV audiences after STAR TREK and before STAR WARS influencing future series of the genre.
Format: DVD MOVIE
Amazon.com
Fans of Space: 1999 (and there are many of them) are lavish in their praise for British producer Gerry Anderson's mid-'70s sci-fi series. They rhapsodize about provocative, seriously scientific story lines, expensive production values, the presence of star (and future Oscar® winner) Martin Landau, and more. But there are others who look at the series' glacial pace, loopy costumes and makeup, cheesy sets, primitive special effects, stilted dialogue, and self-serious tone and wonder what planet those rabid fans are from.
Set 6 of the digitally remastered series, containing six episodes (numbers 31 to 36) on two discs, offers plenty of evidence to support both arguments. On the one hand, there are some intriguing ideas, weighty themes, and good writing here, as in "New Adam, New Eve" (episode 34), in which Koenig (Landau) and company confront the very existence of God himself, or "The Rules of Luton" (episode 31), in which Koenig and Maya (Catherine Schell) find themselves in deep trouble on a planet where plants are the dominant life form. But too often those virtues are hamstrung by poor execution, as in "Luton," where our heroes must battle three absurd-looking and -acting aliens. Smart sensibility, silly look and feel: this is the Space: 1999 paradox. And the truth is that nowadays, when advanced film technology is making even the early Star Wars films look dated, many of these episodes seem positively quaint.
DVD bonus features include a three-minute "making of" featurette (on the first disc), a gallery of production stills (on both discs), and interactive menus. Some material that was not seen in the original U.S. broadcasts has been restored. --Sam Graham
Average customer rating:
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Space 1999, Set 6
Director: Bob Brooks (III) , Kevin Connor , Robert Lynn (II) , and Val Guest Manufacturer: A&E Home Video ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005UW78 Release Date: 2002-02-26 |
Product Description
A&E Home Video proudly presents world-renowned producer Gerry Anderson's seminal 1970's sci-fi adventure series...SPACE: 1999. Set 6 invites you to ESCAPE INTO WORLDS BEYOND BELIEF with the lost men and women trapped on Earth's Moon when it was blasted from Earth orbit in the year 1999. This is their story, and your one-way ticket to adventure.Witness the excitement of SPACE: 1999 as never before: Digitally remastered for a superior DVD presentation from the original 35mm elements UNCUT, with as much as 12 minutes of additional footage not seen in areas of the U.S. during original broadcast release! Combining elements of Science Fiction Adventure and Fantasy SPACE: 1999 has claimed a worldwide following finding a life beyond its titled date, securing its place in the 21st century and beyond.This international cast includes Martin Landau (Academy Award® Winner, Ed Wood) and Barbara Bain (3 time Emmy® Winner, Mission Impossible), Catherine Schell (007 On Her Majesty's Secret Service) and European guests Guy Rolfe (Nicholas and Alexandra) and Sarah Douglas (Superman I & II). With cinema styled special effects by Brian Johnson (Academy Award® winner, Alien, The Empire Strikes Back) SPACE: 1999 premiered to TV audiences after STAR TREK and before STAR WARS influencing future series of the genre.Amazon.com
Fans of Space: 1999 (and there are many of them) are lavish in their praise for British producer Gerry Anderson's mid-'70s sci-fi series. They rhapsodize about provocative, seriously scientific story lines, expensive production values, the presence of star (and future Oscar ® winner) Martin Landau, and more. But there are others who look at the series' glacial pace, loopy costumes and makeup, cheesy sets, primitive special effects, stilted dialogue, and self-serious tone and wonder what planet those rabid fans are from.Set 6 of the digitally remastered series, containing six episodes (numbers 31 to 36) on two discs, offers plenty of evidence to support both arguments. On the one hand, there are some intriguing ideas, weighty themes, and good writing here, as in "New Adam, New Eve" (episode 34), in which Koenig (Landau) and company confront the very existence of God himself, or "The Rules of Luton" (episode 31), in which Koenig and Maya (Catherine Schell) find themselves in deep trouble on a planet where plants are the dominant life form. But too often those virtues are hamstrung by poor execution, as in "Luton," where our heroes must battle three absurd-looking and -acting aliens. Smart sensibility, silly look and feel: this is the Space: 1999 paradox. And the truth is that nowadays, when advanced film technology is making even the early Star Wars films look dated, many of these episodes seem positively quaint.
DVD bonus features include a three-minute "making of" featurette (on the first disc), a gallery of production stills (on both discs), and interactive menus. Some material that was not seen in the original U.S. broadcasts has been restored. --Sam Graham
Customer Reviews:
more fun with Moon Base Alpha.......2006-02-03
Space 1999 right on time!!!.......2005-09-02
Underrated SF classic.......2004-06-04
silly, but fun TV.......2004-03-09
highly enjoyable.......2004-01-08
Average customer rating: |
Space: 1999 Volume 6
Manufacturer: A&E Home Video ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD ASIN: B0007KQFE8 |
Product Description
This is Volume 6 of the Season 1 series and is part of Set #3 (a 2-volume set). Contains three episodes: END OF ETERNITY - Commander Koenig rescues an immortal alien doomed to spend an eternity inside a barren asteroid. The liberated one repays his kindness by wreaking destruction among the Alphans. Koenig must risk his own life in order to destroy a psychopathic alien. WAR GAMES - A planet attack on Moonbase Alpha leaves the Alphans no alternative but to relocate on the planet to plead for mercy on the survivors. But the aliens who inhabit it warn them that humans would be destructive to their civilisation -- and they will protect themselves at any cost. THE LAST ENEMY - Two warring planets, positioned so that they cannot shoot at each other directly, seize Alpha as a gun platform when it wanders into their range. Commander Koenig must negotiate a ceasefire between the opponents when the battling threatens to destroy the Moonbase.DVD:
DVD