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This CBS/Paramount DVD place, “THE FUGITIVE: SEASON 3, VOLUME 1″, was made available on October 27, 2009, and it’s a 4-Disc collection of 15 episodes that mirrors the other DVD sets in this series (in both packaging and image quality) .

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These fifteen black-and-white shows behold absolutely shapely on Digital Disc, thanks to the care and remastering danger achieve into these “Fugitive” releases by CBS/Paramount Home Entertainment. The clarity and crispness of the video we salvage on these discs is virtually perfect. And the Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono audio is quite valid as well.

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ABOUT THE MUSIC:

I was very satisfied to glean that the grand majority of Pete Rugolo’s and CBS’ unique background music from 1965 has been left untouched and is intact throughout this 15-episode DVD collection.

A miniature bit of “replacement” music can be heard in this spot (which is never a sterling thing, in my thought), but for the most share I’m quite gay with the device this first half of Season 3 sounds on these DVDs. Overall, there is very miniature of the Ticket Heyes replacement music incorporated into these Season-Three episodes.

And from what I could screech, the current 1965 background glean for the exemplary episode “Landscape With Running Figures” is almost all intact on Disc #3 of this region, which pleases me very mighty.

I didn’t get a note-by-note evaluation of all the music in “Landscape”, but I did do a few random comparisons between the DVD and a VHS version of the episode that I recorded myself off of the A&E cable-TV network in 1995, and I only noticed one very little change in any of the music in either of the two parts, and that was when some low-key substitute music can be heard in Act I of Share 1, approach the beginning of the episode as Kimble is coming out of the restroom.

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ABOUT SEASON 3:

The third, and next-to-last, season of “The Fugitive” (starring the unhurried David Janssen as the forever-on-the-run Dr. Richard Kimble) was originally seen on network television serve in 1965 and 1966.

Executive producer Quinn Martin and producer Alan Armer knew they had a truly tremendous TV series on their hands with “The Fugitive”, a series that resulted in many viewers rearranging their lives and personal schedules in order to produce distinct they would be able to be in front of a television shroud at 10:00 PM each Tuesday night to notice the latest installment curious the soft-spoken and wrongly-convicted physician from Indiana.

This third season of the display was watched by an average of 40% of all TV-owning households in the United States throughout the 1965-’66 television season. And it’s a season that earned the series the Emmy Award for “Best Dramatic Series” of the year. David Janssen also received an Emmy nomination for his always-solid work during this third year of “The Fugitive”.

While looking over the list of episodes that design up this four-disc volume of “Fugitive” programs, it becomes a cramped bit difficult (for me anyway) to approach up with a “Best Of” type of list for this particular DVD residence….because I assume they’re ALL very valid shows.

But, I do have my favorites from this batch of shows that shine a diminutive brighter than some of the others. And those favorites from this volume would be:

“All The Shrinking Rabbits” (which rekindles the mammoth on-screen chemistry between David Janssen and the astounding Suzanne Pleshette), “Trial By Fire”, “Crack In A Crystal Ball”, “Conspiracy Of Silence”, “An Apple A Day”, and (saving the best for last) the noteworthy two-parter, “Landscape With Running Figures”.

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A Dinky ABOUT “LANDSCAPE”:

The two-part episode “Landscape With Running Figures” first aired in November of 1965, and it represents two of the very best hours of television viewing anyone had during the ‘65-’66 season (whether it be while watching “The Fugitive” or any other TV reveal that season) .

The deeply-layered script for “Landscape” was written by fair a single man — Anthony Wilson. And it’s a script that brings out honest about everything that makes this television series so titanic — plus a few things that we don’t peep too often during the course of Richard Kimble’s travels, such as delving into the mindset of Lt. Philip Gerard (Barry Morse) and his wife (wonderfully portrayed by Barbara Bustle), plus a survey into Dr. Kimble’s inner feelings as he reminisces about his life before he was turned into the man everyone wants to slap handcuffs on.

“Landscape With Running Figures”, which has Kimble (using the alias “Steve Carver”) inadvertently and unknowingly becoming travelling companions with Lt. Gerard’s wife, also gives us a peruse at a deeply-depressed Richard Kimble, which is a side of Kimble we don’t discover very grand during the four years he’s on the hasten from the law.

Some of the things that occur in this two-part episode might seem a tad bit far-fetched or contrived, but when you assume about these things from a different perspective, the events that unfold on the veil don’t really seem overly contrived or “convenient”. And this is due to the presence of the man who is forever chasing and shadowing Dr. Kimble–Lt. Philip Gerard.

In addition, there’s also the realistic diagram the spot elements near together and are presented on the television veil by writer Wilson and Director Walter Grauman.

“Landscape” is a “landmark” 102 minutes of American television, in my idea. These two episodes provide a huge amount of depth to the characters we have been watching for the previous two-plus seasons, along with empathy, compassion, fright, enrage, and desperation.

The gamut of greatness (and of emotions) is blooming great urge from goal line to goal line in “Landscape With Running Figures”. This is a two-parter that deserves to be viewed again and again.

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THE EPISODES:

The 15 episodes in this DVD collection are:

Disc 1:

Wings Of An Angel

Middle Of A Heat Wave

Crack In A Crystal Ball

Trial By Fire

Disc 2:

Conspiracy Of Silence

Three Cheers For Petite Boy Blue

All The Shocked Rabbits

An Apple A Day

Disc 3:

Landscape With Running Figures (Portion 1)

Landscape With Running Figures (Fragment 2)

Set Fire To A Straw Man

Stranger In The Mirror

Disc 4:

The Ample Guys And The Unpleasant Guys

End Of The Line

When The Wind Blows

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TRIVIA:

>> “Landscape With Running Figures” was originally written as a one-part episode, instead of the immensely-entertaining two-part installment it ended up being. Producer Alan Armer said: “Tony Wilson came in with 84 pages, and they were shapely. It was a glorious script. [Associate Producer] George [Eckstein] and I decided, rather than try to cut out 25 pages, to add another 30 pages and accomplish it into a two-parter.”

>> Barbara Accelerate, who is simply outstanding as Marie Gerard in “Landscape With Running Figures”, was not the first choice for the role. Nor was she the second. She was the third choice, unhurried Julie Harris and Hope Lange, but neither of those actresses was available to play the fraction. David Janssen did some lobbying on behalf of his superior friend Barbara Accelerate, and Barbara ultimately ended up landing the fraction.

>> The episode “All The Terrified Rabbits” was initially going to be called “Wanted: Someone To Drive”.

>> The unique title of the episode “Kill Of The Line” was “Never Remove The Milk Drawl”.

[Trivia Source: Ed Robertson's 1993 book, "The Fugitive Recaptured".]

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CLOSING KUDOS:

The fifteen episodes contained in this DVD dwelling are most certainly worth owning, and characterize some of the very best efforts of David Janssen and the “Fugitive” production team.

“The Fugitive: Season Three, Volume One” gets a gargantuan “Thumbs Up” from this writer.

David Von Pein

October 2009

— UPDATE — 29 Oct 2009

I’ve now watched all 15 episodes of S3V1, and in my notion, CBS has done a glowing valid job of leaving the current music mostly intact. Here is my review of each episode.

“Wings Of An Angel” has a vast deal of Heyes synth music, and only a handful of new Rugolo cues. It’s the worst of the space, in terms of replaced music.

“Trial By Fire” has several instances of Heyes music that actually blend rather well, as they seem to have been reduced in volume. There are a few noticeable Heyes cues in Act 4.

“Conspiracy of Silence” has more Heyes than “Trial By Fire”, some of which are stunning loud.

“Landscape With Running Figures allotment 1″ has Heyes cues at 4:31 and 44:12.

“Landscape With Running Figures section 2″ has no Heyes cues that I could hear, although it seemed that there were stretches of silence that might explain that some novel cues were simply removed.

“Space Fire To A Straw Man” has loud Heyes cues at 2:26 and 4:00, with softer Heyes at 29:20 and 37:40.

“The Satisfactory Guys And The Awful Guys” has no Heyes music that I could hear, but the Vigilante-Roundup carnival music that you hear in the background has been replaced.

The following episodes have no replacement music that I could detect -

“Middle Of A Heat Wave”

“Crack In A Crystal Ball”

“Three Cheers For Tiny Boy Blue”

“All The Frightened Rabbits”

“An Apple A Day”

“Stranger In The Mirror”

“Waste Of The Line”

“When The Wind Blows”

In my concept, this area is a beneficial deal better than S2V2. Many episodes are Heyes-free, and other eps like “Landscape” and “Trial” accumulate off lightly with impartial a few instances of Heyes.

The trusty puzzler is “Wings Of An Angel”, which runneth over with Heyes. CBS obviously was trying to please the fans with this release — somehow “Wings Of An Angel” slipped through the cracks.

These videos recognize a dinky “flat” to me, without the strong dim density of the first two seasons. The phrase “remastered from the current negatives” also seems to be missing from the effect. Is CBS cutting corners again, giving us video that has not been remastered from the modern negatives?

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CBS has been made painfully aware of the fact that they made a world-class screwup by needlessly replacing Season Two’s entire musical earn. It amazes me that CBS ever current of this brainless view in the first residence.

In response to the worldwide outrage at this indefensibly-stupid decision, CBS released Replacement Discs with some of the modern music restored. But they did a half-assed job of it, restoring only about half of the unique musical cues, leaving a grand many Crap Synthesizer Cues remaining.

The dvd release of THE FUGITIVE is now on life-support. It’s do or die time for CBS.

If the soundtrack of S3V1 contains 99% of the recent musical cues, with only the problematic Capitol Music Library cues replaced, then Fuge fans worldwide will give it their approval.

But if CBS botches this release by replacing ANYTHING other than those few Capitol cues, then this product will sit on the shelves. And that will be the ruin of the line for CBS’ release of THE FUGITIVE.

CBS only has itself to blame. They have taken the attitude that “The Music Doesn’t Matter”. It is this attitude that has been their downfall. THE FUGITIVE could be a home-run for CBS, selling tens of thousands of copies and making expansive profits for CBS. But this will happen only when CBS changes their attitude about replacing music.

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