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27 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Here we go again..., September 6, 2007
We go through this every year when a new Golden Collection comes out. The pricing of this set was originally set sixty dollars higher than if you bought Looney Tunes: Golden Collection, Vol. 1-4 together and then preordered Volume 5 separately, which is what I suggest if you don't have any of the Golden Collections and want to start from scratch until the price comes down. As for the collections themselves, they are all outstanding. The only negative thing I can say is that characters and styles of cartoons tend to be grouped together on a disc, so you may get tired of watching an entire disc of Tweety in one sitting, for example.
This year's release, Volume 5, will include:
1. A disc dedicated to Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck, with a few cartoons in which they appear together.
2. A disc dedicated to fairy tales. This disc will include a couple of Tex Avery's. Some cartoons will have the familiar Looney Tunes characters, and some will not.
3. A disc dedicated to the work of Bob Clampett. Clampett's irreverant and outrageous style is what helped Warner Bros. animation step out of the shadow of Disney's style into its own unique territory.
4. Disc four is entitled "Early Daze" and has some early cartoons and miscellaneous classics on it.
Special features include a documentary on Chuck Jones made in 2000, commentaries, TV specials, and segments from "The Bugs Bunny Show". Note that my two star rating will not hold and should turn to five stars if the collection ever equals or betters the individually sets sold separately.
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21 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Looney, But Not At This Price, October 28, 2007
When it comes to classic animation, Warner Brothers has really hit the nail on the head with the Looney Tunes. Nevertheless, the animated gems have maintained a hard core audience with longtime die hard fans. Unfortunately, I wish I could say the same for younger audiences today, who seem to be more into acts like Spongebob Squarepants, and Jimmy Neutron on Nickelodeon. Sadly though, the classics have really influenced so much more today in animation, but the Looney Tunes gang doesn't get that credit where it really is due. Nevertheless, the previous box sets have all shined brightly from the Golden Collection, and now you could have all of them, including the newest, volume 5.
The Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volumes 1-5 consists of nearly 300 animated greats from Warner brothers classic era of animation. The collection includes classic cartoons that have been restored mostly well, but there were some audio problems in volume 1. The collection though includes classic gems like What's Opera Doc?, Chuck Jones masterpiece spoof of Vagner's operatic classics where Bugs & Elmer are going head to head through music and dance, and the Oscar-winning Speedy Gonzales where Speedy speeds his way to get cheese out of a factory for his friends, and goes past through their goofy guard cat, Sylvester. There are also a lot of great cartoons here, especially highlighted on the newest volume 5 which includes classics from the great director Bob Clampett like The Old Grey Hare, and The Daffy Doc, where Daffy fakes being a doctor to a well Porky and tries to operate on him in the looniest way possible.
There are also a lot of extras here including commentary from people who worked in these wonderful cartoons like June Foray, who played Granny, Tweety's guardian and the overlooked villainess, Witch Hazel, and behind the toons which takes a look at the characters from Pepe Le Pew and Elmer Fudd, which work very well, and classic TV Specials that were dedicated to Warner Brothers cartoon legends like the 1990 clebration Happy Birthday Bugs: 50 Looney Years; which featured special dedications from Whoopi Goldberg, Dr. Ruth and the late and definitively great voiceover Mel Blanc, as well as other TV Specials like Bugs Bunny's Bustin' Out All Over on the new Volume 5.
Still, with a price of nearly $300, Looney Tunes Golden Collection Volumes 1-5 doesn't completely add up in value to newcomers of the Looney Tunes classics, unless you are a definitive die hard fan. Still, it does have a lot of classic cartoons that are still sure to make anybody laugh their heads off, and that still is all folks!
Extras: B
Price: C-
Remastering: B-
Cartoons: B 1/2+
Packaging: B
Overall: C+
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
What's with the wild price swings?, March 12, 2008
As is stands today, it is almost exactly DOUBLE the price to buy the set, than to buy the individual volumes separately. Every now and then this set comes down to a reasonable price, but it seems that every time I look at it in my wish list, the price has changed. One day it's $300, then it's $190, then it's $240, etc etc etc. What gives?
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