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66 - Season One Volume 1 Martin Milner (Tod Stiles) and George Maharis (Buz Murdock) star in this classic television drama about a couple of young guys who set out to see America in a brand new 1961 Corvette drop top. What makes this show truly unique is that it was filmed in a different U.S. city each week, giving us a stark glance at what living in America looked like in 1960. It was a vastly different landscape, people lived a lot closer to the dirt back then. (I'll bet that decrepit New Orleans dock in episode three is a multi-million dollar condo development if it wasn't washed away by the levy failure.) No television show had ever attempted anything on this grand a scale before, the technology necessary to make mobile TV production a practical enterprise had just been made available. The first episodes of Route 66 are dark affairs, the show brightens up - both in terms of lighting and storylines - in the years that followed. The gritty storylines are penned by TV's finest authors (mostly Stirling Silliphant here) and the show also had a roster of fine directors like Arthur Hiller and Roger Kay during this period. Like Wagon Train, The Fugitive or Lost In Space, the only constants are the two stars who become entangled, mostly for romantic reasons, in other people's problems. For the most part the stories are compelling, if a bit slow paced and overly melodramatic at times. But then, TV viewers of the day preferred to luxuriate in their favorite shows, they were meant to be transportive and Route 66 is that. Then there's that car - that luscious 'Vette the boys tool around in. I'll take that car cross country right now! (In fact, I did cross the USA in a 1969 Mustang convertible a few years ago.) Every show opening is stylish and thrilling, with the guys casually rolling into whatever town they're visiting, only the iconic theme music by Nelson Riddle stays the same week to week (and even it gets some jazzy re-arrangements from time to time). It's amazing to see these locations as they existed nearly 50 years ago; if you live or lived in or around the places Tod and Buzz visited you'll be doubly amused. The superbly photographed locales during the first half of season 1 include the Mississippi Delta, New Orleans, the Louisiana Gulf, Page Arizona, Carlsbad Canyon, and small towns in Texas (El Paso), California (Malibu & Indio), and Oregon. They even arrive at the Riverside, California race track in time for the Grand Prix stock-car races. Sadly, not every print is pristine though most look pretty darn good. There are some sound and picture problems on a few episodes but it's certainly an improvement on the torn up prints of old. There are bonus features like guest cast bios for every episode (which is a nice touch and handy to have for those 'who was that guy?' moments) along with a few commercial bumpers and actual ads that aired with the shows in addition to a photo history of the Corvette. An episode commentary or two might be nice since the actors are still around, maybe next time? TV on DVD Reviews: |