I was just joking around. Following the logic of Lee's post about how movies should be full screen on 4x3 TVs, I guess he would want to see LoA in pan and scan though.
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THE BOWERY BOYS on DVD: continuing discussion of Warner's eventual release plans (UPDATE 4/19:... - Page 11
Poll Results: How would you prefer THE BOWERY BOYS to arrive on DVD?
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40% (63)Release them now as a "Best Of" effort with features
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59% (91)Wait for better elements to arrive for a chronological release
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Cees
Has Warner's obtained acceptable prints of all the Bowery Boy movies? If not, which titles are they still looking for?
Agreed, Jeff. I still am eagerly awaiting the release of this series, trying to be as patient as possible (not that I have any other choice!). But I just hope Warner doesn't get bogged down just because one film is not as "sharp" as others, or one cannot be located, or whatever. There will always be appreciative fans happy to buy, as well as some who will complain that every little detail is not "perfect".
As for presenting the later films in their proper OAR, I'm all for that. As has been said, this is the day and age of Widescreen TVs. HOWEVER -- it's not a deal breaker for me, I'd just like Warner to be aware of that as well; even if they cannot produce all the latter movies in widescreen OAR, I'll be content to get them all in 4x3, rather than not at all.
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widescreen films in their original aspect ratio.
Edited by Joe Karlosi - 10/21/09 at 4:12am
I could see the Andy Hardy series getting a full release because at least one of them is on television monthly. That series has new fans coming each month who would be willing to buy an official release. With the lack of exposure I'm really curious how many people even know who the Bowery Boys are and if they would care or not about any future release. Even just showing their horror titles this month on TCM would at least draw them some new fans. When they do show the Boys, it makes no sense, to me at least, to show those PD films each time.
WGN stopped airing the Bowery Boys in 1987. I doubt if the films still remain in their library, sometimes I wonder what happened with their prints of these films.
I think you are confusing The Bowery Boys with the East Side kids which is easy to do. There are 48 Bowery Boys films exactly. ESK have had alot of PD releases the Bowery Boys do not. Bowery Boys only had 6 films released on VHS by Warner in the early 90's. Any other release of them has been strickly bootleg. So the only other exposure of the Bowery Boys the last 20 years has been either TCM and in the 90's A & E was showing them for a little while.
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It was satire, I had lost my humor for a couple of minutes.
Don't for a moment underestimate the interests and knowledge of today's (so-called) younger DVD consumer (and there was recently a heated argument about this in one of the other discussion threads).
Most of what is learned nowadays comes via "word-of-mouth." How many times in these very discussion threads has someone here said, "I never heard of THE INVADERS tv series before but on the strength of what you guys have been saying about it I bought the first season DVD set and I am glad that I did!"
So forums like HTF serve an important purpose one that (likely) wouldn't even have been considered.
When THE BOWERY BOYS films DVD releases are finally launched they will enjoy a veritable avalanche of online promotion and attention focused on them via all the DVD information and review services...you had better believe it! It will be royally treated like a major event (which in a sense it is).
Just to reaffirm once again if the initial group of (six, seven or eight) BOWERY BOYS films are now in readiness for a volume one DVD set release then let's get this thing out some time in 2010 and let the retail sales speak for themselves.
There is no need to wait any further unless there are still some additional problems involved.
This is an issue which hopefully Ron will be able to shed further light on with his impending meeting with the Warner Brothers Home Entertainment powers-that-be in December.
I was never all that keen on a chronological release myself as I have never seen these films aired in their theatrical release order any way. Speaking for myself I would have preferred a healthy (and diverse) blending of the early, middle and latter films in the series to be featured in each volume set. If we had gone that way we would probably be on volume two or three by now.
Jeff T.
Edited by JeffT. - 10/23/09 at 4:52am
Did A&E run them all, or just a package of select episodes.?

Well I guess that I am the first of the youngest generation to initially discover THE BOWERY BOYS films on television.
Don't for a moment underestimate the interests and knowledge of today's (so-called) younger DVD consumer (and there was recently a heated argument about this in one of the other discussion threads).
Most of what is learned nowadays comes via "word-of-mouth." How many times in these very discussion threads has someone here said, "I never heard of THE INVADERS tv series before but on the strength of what you guys have been saying about it I bought the first season DVD set and I am glad that I did!"
So forums like HTF serve an important purpose one that (likely) wouldn't even have been considered.
When THE BOWERY BOYS films DVD releases are finally launched they will enjoy a veritible avalanche of online promotion and attention focused on them via all the DVD information and review services...you had better believe it! It will be royally treated like a major event (which in a sense it is).
Just to reaffirm once again if the initial group of (six, seven or eight) BOWERY BOYS films are now in readiness for a volume one DVD set release then let's get this thing out some time in 2010 and let the retail sales speak for themselves.
There is no need to wait any further unless there are still some additional problems involved.
This is an issue which hopefully Ron will be able to shed further light on with his impending meeting with the Warner Brothers Home Entertainment powers-that-be in December.
I was never all that keen on a chronological release myself as I have never seen these films aired in their theatrical release order any way. Speaking for myself I would have preferred a healthy (and diverse) blending of the early, middle and latter films in the series to be featured in each volume set. If we had gone that way we would probably be on volume two or three by now.
Jeff T.
I highly doubt they'll do anywhere near as well as people will like them to.
I think these will do as well as THE THREE STOOGES releases.
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You've touched a nerve. While you might feel like you are the sole fan left for the Bowery Boys' opus, be assured that you are not alone.
I have to admit that I'm 68 and saw a lot of the Bowery Boys films when they were first released to my local theater. Later when they began to appear on TV this was like a dream come true. Sometime in my late teens, early 20 I got into 16mm sound film collecting and was able to legally purchase prints of several Bowery Boys films which I eventually showed to my own sons and their friends. Needless to say I have several BB titles in my DVD collection.
My take on all this is that the BB films are not that well known because of the sparsity of titles available and the poor quality of those that are.
I keep watching and waiting for someone to do a decent restoration of some of the BB titles.
Meanwhile I highly recommend the book "The Films of the Bowery Boys - A pictorial history of the Dead End Kids" by David Hayes and Brent Walker. You might have to look on ebay. I bought my hardback copy in 1982. This book covers all the films from all the various groupings that make up the complete Bowery Boys output.
Thanks for your post.
Richard

Mdnitoil,
You've touched a nerve. While you might feel like you are the sole fan left for the Bowery Boys' opus, be assured that you are not alone.
I have to admit that I'm 68 and saw a lot of the Bowery Boys films when they were first released to my local theater. Later when they began to appear on TV this was like a dream come true. Sometime in my late teens, early 20 I got into 16mm sound film collecting and was able to legally purchase prints of several Bowery Boys films which I eventually showed to my own sons and their friends. Needless to say I have several BB titles in my DVD collection.
My take on all this is that the BB films are not that well known because of the sparsity of titles available and the poor quality of those that are.
I keep watching and waiting for someone to do a decent restoration of some of the BB titles.
Meanwhile I highly recommend the book "The Films of the Bowery Boys - A pictorial history of the Dead End Kids" by David Hayes and Brent Walker. You might have to look on ebay. I bought my hardback copy in 1982. This book covers all the films from all the various groupings that make up the complete Bowery Boys output.
Thanks for your post.
Richard
I certainly wasn't trying to portray myself as the only Bowery Boys fan, just trying to illustrate the difference between them and the Three Stooges. To expect them to sell as well would be pretty unrealistic. For the record, I really am the only person I know that's even heard of the Bowery Boys...but it's not like I know a ton of people! Take that back. My brother knows of them, but he doesn't buy movies.
All that aside, I certainly hope there is at least a big enough audience to see this thing through with a retail release. The idea of 40+ films going to the Archives at 20 bucks a pop would be tough to swallow. Even with bundling, it would get pretty ugly pretty quickly.
Exhibiting weakness before your competition is something that any successful business can never afford to do.
Need I remind everyone here that it was Warner Brothers who first proposed releasing THE BOWERY BOYS on DVD not us! And there must have been a good reason for them to do so. We have conscientiously and enthusiastically supported this excellent proposal. Quite frankly Warner Brothers cannot back down now without humiliatingly embarrassing repercussions as a consequence.
Don't doubt for a moment that big brother out there is watching! And I am referring to the competition.
Another reason for the delay has been that other movie DVD releases were given priority status over THE BOWERY BOYS film series...none of which have done particularly well. This is something that Warner Brothers has apparently acknowledged and hopefully the company will learn from this. Encouraging or continually pursing failure is just not rational. You just can't force things on people that they just are not interested in. And that is especially true of the considerable younger aged demographic out there.
Robert Osborne may well be a great guy but deeming what the public is willing to watch on television and what they are willing to buy can be two different things entirely. Let's face it this guy has been the (chief) architect in what disasterous directions Warner Brothers Home Entertainment has been following when marketing its extensive film library. The blame rests with him.
Warner Brothers DVD film releases (unwisely) selected were (generally) failing long before the current U.S. recession came along so don't continue using this as an excuse. In good times or bad the results would have been exactly the same.
'
As far as the Three Stooges are concerned I loved them as a kid but now I find them an absolute over-familiar bore. Columbia has really milked this franchise for what it is worth to be sure. But as both a kid and (now) an adult I have continued to like THE BOWERY BOYS film series as an overall superior comedy entertainment and I am (once again) supremely confident that it will prove its might with today's classic film DVD collector (which encompases all ages).
I adamently feel that people are open to something "old" (or vintage) that is unfamiliar, fresh and new to them. I keep repeating myself because it is still being overlooked that THE BOWERY BOYS film series is a good representation of both 1940s and 1950s screen entertainment both of which are of considerable interest among classic movie buffs.
The most frustrating aspect to all this is that everything is set in place. The world (including the overseas markets and Canada) are open to a BOWERY BOYS film series DVD release. All is in readiness except its seems Warner Brothers Home Entertainment.
Jeff T.
Edited by JeffT. - 10/23/09 at 4:54am
- THE BOWERY BOYS on DVD: continuing discussion of Warner's eventual release plans (UPDATE 4/19: POST #416)
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