Educational Archives: Limited Edition Lunchbox (4 DVD Box Set)

Editorial Review:
Description
Generations of American children sat in dark classrooms and absorbed wisdom from 16mm educational films. Through the flicker of dim projector bulbs and the warble of optical soundtracks, a blueprint for better living in the atomic age was spelled out in no uncertain terms. This collection from the late 1940s to the 1980s is historical, hysterical, and filled with more important misinformation than you can digest in one viewing. Fantoma presents this special, four-volume set in a limited-edition metal lunchbox, complete with working thermos! Volume One: "Sex and Drugs" - Learn about the dangers of marijuana, the difference between boys and girls, and the joys of menstruation in such gems as "LSD: Insight or Insanity," "It's Wonderful Being a Girl," and "Marijuana" (with Sonny Bono). Volume Two: "Social Engineering 101" - Discover how to fit in, keep clean, choose between right and wrong, and behave yourself in the cafeteria. Featuring "Lunchroom Manners," "Soapy the Germ Fighter," "Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast"," and "Shy Guy." Volume Three: "Driver's Ed" - In the '40s and '50s, America faced a threat even more frightening than the Bomb: teenagers with cars. Discover how we dealt with this new and terrible menace in "The Last Prom," "Joyride," "Safety Belt for Susie," and "Tomorrow's Drivers" (narrated by James Stewart). Volume Four: "On the Job" - Learn about workplace safety and how to fire someone without being shot in "Shake Hands with Danger," "The Grapevine," "The Trouble with Women," "How to Keep a Job," and "When You Grow Up."
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Educational Archives: Limited Edition Lunchbox (4 DVD Box Set)
Starring: Various Artists Manufacturer: Fantoma ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001XAM9U Release Date: 2004-05-18 |
Description
Generations of American children sat in dark classrooms and absorbed wisdom from 16mm educational films. Through the flicker of dim projector bulbs and the warble of optical soundtracks, a blueprint for better living in the atomic age was spelled out in no uncertain terms. This collection from the late 1940s to the 1980s is historical, hysterical, and filled with more important misinformation than you can digest in one viewing. Fantoma presents this special, four-volume set in a limited-edition metal lunchbox, complete with working thermos! Volume One: "Sex and Drugs" - Learn about the dangers of marijuana, the difference between boys and girls, and the joys of menstruation in such gems as "LSD: Insight or Insanity," "It's Wonderful Being a Girl," and "Marijuana" (with Sonny Bono). Volume Two: "Social Engineering 101" - Discover how to fit in, keep clean, choose between right and wrong, and behave yourself in the cafeteria. Featuring "Lunchroom Manners," "Soapy the Germ Fighter," "Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast"," and "Shy Guy." Volume Three: "Driver's Ed" - In the '40s and '50s, America faced a threat even more frightening than the Bomb: teenagers with cars. Discover how we dealt with this new and terrible menace in "The Last Prom," "Joyride," "Safety Belt for Susie," and "Tomorrow's Drivers" (narrated by James Stewart). Volume Four: "On the Job" - Learn about workplace safety and how to fire someone without being shot in "Shake Hands with Danger," "The Grapevine," "The Trouble with Women," "How to Keep a Job," and "When You Grow Up."
Average customer rating:
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The Educational Archives - Limited Edition Lunchbox
Manufacturer: Fantoma ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD ASIN: B0000714AC Release Date: 2002-12-10 |
Description
Generations of American children sat in dark classrooms and absorbed wisdom from 16mm educational films. Through the flicker of dim projector bulbs and the warble of optical soundtracks, a blueprint for better living in the atomic age was spelled out in no uncertain terms. This collection from the late 1940s to the 1980s is historical, hysterical, and filled with more important misinformation than you can digest in one viewing. Fantoma presents this special, four-volume set in a limited-edition metal lunchbox, complete with working thermos! Volume One: "Sex and Drugs" - Learn about the dangers of marijuana, the difference between boys and girls, and the joys of menstruation in such gems as "LSD: Insight or Insanity," "It's Wonderful Being a Girl," and "Marijuana" (with Sonny Bono). Volume Two: "Social Engineering 101" - Discover how to fit in, keep clean, choose between right and wrong, and behave yourself in the cafeteria. Featuring "Lunchroom Manners," "Soapy the Germ Fighter," "Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast"," and "Shy Guy." Volume Three: "Driver's Ed" - In the '40s and '50s, America faced a threat even more frightening than the Bomb: teenagers with cars. Discover how we dealt with this new and terrible menace in "The Last Prom," "Joyride," "Safety Belt for Susie," and "Tomorrow's Drivers" (narrated by James Stewart). Volume Four: "On the Job" - Learn about workplace safety and how to fire someone without being shot in "Shake Hands with Danger," "The Grapevine," "The Trouble with Women," "How to Keep a Job," and "When You Grow Up."Customer Reviews:
The Best DVD Box Set In Existence!.......2004-10-04
The Road to Hell is Paved by Good Intentions.......2003-01-07
In these mini masterpieces you get to meet all sorts of interesting characters. There's Chalky, a talking drawing on a chalkboard who, in only 10 minutes, turns a potentially homicidal young bully into the paragon of politeness, then, after the lesson is over, has the young man help him commit assisted suicide! Then there's Soapy, a bar of soap dressed in yellow tights and puffy purple sleeves with fancy elbow length cuffs who sneaks into a young boy's room at night to teach him that washing does not make you a "sissy" by gesturing flamboyantly and making the boy watch a film of a rugged cowboy soaping up. On the other end of the spectrum is Mr. Bungle, a fun-loving puppet who children despise so much that they do their best to act like pod people in order to avoid being anything like him: Mr. Bungle wouldn't neatly line up his utensils on his lunch tray before eating, so I will! In another film a woman learns the truth about hot dogs by taking LSD: they are actually made of still-living troll dolls who have been taken away from their wives and children (leaving them without support) and are cruelly being served as food to those who haven't had the veil lifted from their eyes by popping acid (the film is unintentionally more pro-vegetarianism than anti-drug). But after learning all this from the troll doll, she cruelly stamps it to death!
There are "real" people too, like a stereotyped Italian shopkeeper with syphilus, a mother who apologizes for interrupting her son's masturbating, a factory worker who trips and falls every 2 seconds, and teenagers doomed to die in car crashes on their prom night. In "The Outsider", a seriously mental girl breaks into tears wondering why other kids order chocolate icecream when she orders root bear.
And there's celebrities! Sal Mineo (the guy who dies in "Rebel Without a Cause") sarcastically makes fun of drug addicts then sings a lame song about russian roulette. Lorne Greene advocates using pets as aids in teaching young children about reproduction. In "Shy Guy", narrated by Mike Wallace, a young Dick York stars as a likeable outsider who is encouraged by his father to spy on other young men so he can learn to copy them, conform and become boring. Lou Rawls recommends that blacks join the Navy as a solution to racial discrimination (!) Best of all, there is a stoned looking Sonny Bono dressed in a shiny gold suit who, in a supposed anti-pot film, actually teaches kids that it is okay to smoke pot except while in a bad mood or operating heavy machinery.
As a male, I also finally got to see one of those special films only girls get to see about menstruation (basically an extended TV commercial for maxi pads, complete with blatant product placement).
Not all of the films are funny, but all are fascinating in their own ways. I'm not sure what "Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast?" is trying to teach, but she has some interesting posters.
Unfortunately, some of the Sex and Drugs films are edited for time, most drastically in the case of "Narcotics: Pit of Despair", but that film is available complete and in a better print as an extra feature on the DVD for "Blood Freak" (also highly recommended to those interested in unintentionally humourous anti-drug propaganda). There are other films I wish were included in the collection, e.g. the Navy's "LSD: Trip to Where?", but the Educational Archives is a great start, filled with amazing films, many I've never heard about.
Hopefully additional volumes will be released in the future.
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