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The Virginian – Complete First Season on 10 DVDs – Limited Edition Embossed Collector’s Tin! Plus Bonus Interview DVD!

The Virginian – Complete First Season on 10 DVDs – Limited Edition Embossed Collector’s Tin! Plus Bonus Interview DVD!

Owen Wister’s 1902 western novel The Virginian was one of the first great novels of the American West. Set in the semi-mythical town of Medicine Bow, Wyoming in the 1890s, it chronicled the lives and relationships of the people who came west and settled the wild land. Starring James Drury in the title role, The Virginian was the first 90 minute television western, airing in prime time on NBC from 1962-1971. The stellar cast included Lee J. Cobb, Doug McClure, Gary Clark and Roberta Shore, and ea

Rating: (out of 9 reviews)

List Price: $ 79.98

Price: $ 36.81

5 Comments

  1. Sherryl Williams

    Review by Sherryl Williams for The Virginian – Complete First Season on 10 DVDs – Limited Edition Embossed Collector’s Tin! Plus Bonus Interview DVD!
    Rating:
    I am very glad to see the Virginian is finally out on DVD. The first season is 10 dvd out in May. I remember the series with great fondness. The fist season has many good episodes with Judge Garth and how he came to adopt Betsy. It also has Trampas at his most charming. I am anxious to see if the old series holds up. It took a long time to put it on DVD as it was in a 90 minute format. All Were in color also. This is a series worth watching again. Pay careful attention to the guest stars. Many are famous now and were not then.

  2. ADW

    Review by ADW for The Virginian – Complete First Season on 10 DVDs – Limited Edition Embossed Collector’s Tin! Plus Bonus Interview DVD!
    Rating:
    If you’ve seen these as they are now showing on Encore Westerns, you know that the quality is amazing, can’t wait to get these on DVD!!

  3. Miss Marples

    Review by Miss Marples for The Virginian – Complete First Season on 10 DVDs – Limited Edition Embossed Collector’s Tin! Plus Bonus Interview DVD!
    Rating:
    I couldn’t wait for the May release of this fine series either so I picked it up at Sam’s Club. This has to be the most beautifully photographed of all the classic TV Westerns. Another reviewer mentioned each episode was like a mini-movie, and this is true.

    The storylines are credible and entertaining, and the cast is stellar. LJ Cobb is in a category by himself, of course, but having watched the first two seaons on Encore Westerns (and then again on the DVDs) I’d forgotten what a genuinely good actor James Drury was. Ditto for Clu Gulagher and Doug McClure. And while I am enjoying the later episodes, I must confess I miss Gary Clarke’s “Steve” and the chemistry the three main leads–Drury, McClure and Clarke–displayed during the first two seasons.

    One of the things I find enjoyable is how “real” the series plays. The guy that played Randy carps about this in the book written about the series (especially how the horses were handled?) but I beg to differ. Within the constraints of the time it was filmed–the 60s and 70s when all the actresses had the wrong hair and makeup for the Victorian Era, and even the dim saloon interiors were lit up bright as day–The Virginian looked as real as it could get. It’s one of the few Western series that actually took advantage of the vistas–we get plenty of sweeping shots of Shiloh, etc.–and low and behold! When the script called for it, Drury and Co. were actually portrayed as scruffy, dusty and *bearded*.

    And another thing: They actually herded real cattle and horses. I don’t recall that happening on any episode of The Big Valley. And did any of Ben and his sons ever sport a five o’clock shadow, even when they’d been out riding the trail for days, away from the ranch house and hot water?

    Finally, the leads could all actually RIDE. I’m talking about Drury and McClure here, especially, as both of them are perfectly at ease with horses, on the ground as well as astride, but all actors that were supposed to be working cowboys look credible riding. LJ Cobb, not so much–I can see where they shot and edited some scenes to cover his unease but even that doesn’t detract. After all, the Judge is the boss–he’s not a range rider. It’s conceivable that while he might be comfortable around horses that he wouldn’t be a crack rider as his hands would have to be.

    Now, as to the quality of the DVDS: They are excellent. They look sharper played in my upscaling Blu-Ray player than they look on Encore, and that’s saying something. I was afraid we would be short-changed when it came to the transfer quality but someone took pains to make the DVDs as pristine as possible. I’m sure it helps that the original series was such a high quality production to begin with. I haven’t gotten to the bonus tracks yet as I am still savoring the episodes.

    So when do we get Season Three?

  4. Mad Mau

    Review by Mad Mau for The Virginian – Complete First Season on 10 DVDs – Limited Edition Embossed Collector’s Tin! Plus Bonus Interview DVD!
    Rating:
    Just picked up Season One – Part One, Season One – Part Two, Season Two – Part One & Season Two – Part Two at my local Sam’s Club at $19.98 for each half season.

    I’ve only watched a couple of episodes, but can tell you that the picture quality is even better than it is on my Dish Network Encore Western Channel where they are currently showing. Image quality on the Dish channel is 480i by satellite and the colors are much more vibrant and the picture sharper on the new DVD discs.

    There are also interviews of some length included, by: James Drury, Roberta Shore, Peter Brown and others.

    If you want a super deluxe set, then wait for this special Tin Box package release. However, if like me, you can’t wait any longer for your very own Virginian “fix”, then trot down to your local Sam’s Club and see if they are also carrying them.

  5. The Movie Man

    Review by The Movie Man for The Virginian – Complete First Season on 10 DVDs – Limited Edition Embossed Collector’s Tin! Plus Bonus Interview DVD!
    Rating:
    Until “The Virginian” bowed on NBC in the fall of 1962, Westerns were relegated to either half-hour or one-hour time slots. The network took a chance, counting on the popularity of Westerns at the time, to expand a weekly Western series to 90 minutes. The gamble paid off. The show ran through 1971, chalking up a total of 249 episodes. “The Virginian” is the third longest-running TV Western, behind only “Gunsmoke” and “Bonanza.”

    “The Virginian – The Complete First Season” contains all 30 full-color episodes from the first season. The 1902 Owen Wister novel on which the series was based was set in the town of Medicine Bow, Wyoming in the 1890′s, and chronicled the lives and relationships of the people who came west to settle the wild land. The title refers to a man of mystery whose past was unknown.

    The novel was first adapted to the screen as a silent picture directed by Cecil B. DeMille. There was another silent film in 1923 and then the 1929 sound version starring Gary Cooper as the man with no name. Joel McCrea reprised the role on the big screen in 1946. The story was one of the best known in the genre by the time it hit home screens.

    For the TV series, James Drury starred in the title role as foreman of the Shiloh Ranch. Doug McClure portrayed Trampas, a devil-may-care lovable rogue, and Lee J. Cobb played patriarchal figure Judge Garth, owner of the Shiloh Ranch. Gary Clark, Pippa Scott, and Roberta Shore rounded out the cast of regulars.

    Filmed mostly in the greater Los Angeles area, on the back lots and sound stages of Universal Studios and at surrounding ranches, “The Virginian” was strengthened by A-list guest stars. In the first season, George C. Scott, Lee Marvin, Bette Davis, Robert Duvall, Brian Keith, Colleen Dewhurst, Hugh O’Brian, Gena Rowlands, Jack Warden, Ricardo Montalban, Fabian, Eddie Albert, Vera Miles, and Ida Lupino guested.

    The Collector’s Set is packaged in a handsome, embossed tin container. In addition to the entire first season, the set includes a bonus disc containing interviews with star James Drury and cast members Gary Clark, Roberta Shore, Robert Fuller, and Peter Brown.

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