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Aug 2, 2007, 7:52 GMT
The second season of the cult
favorite makes its way to DVD and this time it actually gets some special
features. What’s also interesting is that they manage to fit six DVDs into a
regular sized keep case.
What the back of the box says:
“Once upon a
time is now... Beauty And The Beast: The Second Season, the legendary, romantic
show, is as alluring as ever in a magnificent 6-disc set. This DVD of the Emmy
Award - and Golden Globe - winning fantasy-crime drama series includes all 22
breathtaking second-season episodes, which feature the adventures and romance
between Vincent (Ron Perlman), a mythic, noble man-beast, and Catherine (Linda
Hamilton), a savvy assistant DA in New York.
Though they live in
separate worlds, from the very moment these two cross paths, they share a strong
psychic bond as their love continues to grow without measure.”
Disc
1:
Chamber Music: While walking in the world above, Vincent recognized Rolly,
a teenage musical prodigy and ex-tunnel dweller who is now a
junkie.
Remember Love: With the help of a guardian angel, Vincent gets a
good look at what life would be like without him after he becomes frustrated at
not being able to live in the world above.
Ashes, Ashes: A plague is
unknowingly brought into the world below by an escaped Russian
seaman.
Dead of Winter: Paracelsus, Vincent’s chief nemesis, prepares the
perfect disguise, which will enable him to make a killer appearance at
Catherine’s first Winterfest celebration in the world below.
Disc
2:
God Bless the Child: Catherine brings a pregnant young woman to the
tunnels to await the birth of her child, but the young mother-to-be falls in
love with Vincent.
Sticks and Stones: A deaf girl who used to live below
falls in with a street gang, which threatens to put a deadly end to their first
serious love affair.
A Fair and Perfect Knight: Catherine befriends a boy
from the world below who leaves the tunnels to go to college…and falls in love
with Catherine.
Labyrinths: The world below’s existence is threatened
after a young neighbor of Catherine’s follows her to the tunnels.
Disc
3:
Brothers: Father’s son, Devin, rescues a giant, deformed man from the
circus to live in the world below.
A Gentle Rain: Catherine reopens a
case that reveals a well-respected tunnel dweller is wanted for
manslaughter.
The Outsiders: The peaceful world below is threatened when
a violent “family” invades the tunnels.
Orphans: After her father dies,
Catherine thinks about living the rest of her life in the world
below.
Disc 4:
Arabesque: A famous ballerina, who was once a tunnel
dweller, revisits the tunnels, which opens up the old emotional wounds for
Vincent.
When the Bluebird Sings: A strange young man, who claims to be
an artist, involves Catherine and Vincent in a series of strange and mysterious
events.
The Watcher: A mysterious voyeur stalks and terrorizes Catherine
before closing in for the kill.
A Distant Shore: A murder case in Los
Angeles pulls Catherine 3,000 miles away from Vincent, who still has a sense of
her, but feels powerless to help her.
Disc 5:
Trial: Catherine
prosecutes a Wall Street celebrity in a case of fatal child abuse, but the man’s
wife refuses to testify against him.
A Kingdom by the Sea: Putting her
life on the line, Catherine tries to protect a man who’s the target of a death
squad.
The Hollow Men: After trying to bring a pair of murderers to
justice, Catherine becomes the killer’s next target.
Disc 6:
What
Rough Beast: Vincent’s identity may be exposed after a persistent investigative
reporter manages to snap a photograph of him in an act of
violence.
Ceremony of Innocence: Vincent nearly goes mad after Paracelsus
spreads “secrets” about his birth, forcing a deadly showdown between the two
enemies.
The Rest is Silence: Losing control to the dark side of his
nature, Vincent struggles with his madness along in a cave. Meanwhile, Catherine
desperately searches for Vincent, determined to help him.
Beauty and the
Beast is a show that had a major cult following. It tells the tale of a
mythical, yet realistic (in that it still has grungy tunnels and not just
complete fantasy), environment beneath the streets of New York City.
What
was the beating heart of the show was the romance between Vincent and Catherine.
However, there was also fine work by Roy Dotrice as Father and Tony Jay as the
villainous Paracelsus. In some ways you can see how people fell in love with the
show, to be taken away to a secret world only to find love – who doesn’t want
that?
It had a romantic Shakespearean quality as well as the fantasy
element. It has long been wanted on DVD by fans and a first season came out a
while ago, but it was relatively featureless. Ah, but the episodes are the thing
(but in our DVD age we still want to see the gravy). Season two makes up for it,
but only slightly.
Beauty and the Beast is presented in fullscreen as
they were originally aired on television. Special features include introductions
by Ron Perlman and Linda Hamilton on select episodes.
Those episodes are
Chamber Music (3 minutes), Fair and Perfect Knight (2 minutes), A Distant Shore
(1 minute), and The Rest is Silence (3 minutes). Any special features are
welcome, but commentaries or more in depth interviews or a documentary would’ve
been better (hint, hint for season three).
Beauty and the Beast is a
beloved series and those wanting it will be happy that season two has made it to
DVD. This time they do add some special features, but could’ve done better in
that department. Whatever the case, be prepared to go beneath the streets of New
York and into a world of the Beast.
See the
original review at
dvd.monsterandcritics.com
Beauty and the Beast - The Complete Second Season DVD
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST: THE COMPLETE SECOND SEASON
Opening Statement
One of the strangest and yet well-loved series of
the '80s roars back onto DVD with its second season. Beauty and the Beast mixed
fantasy, romance, action, and crime, lighting it all with candlelight and
setting it to classical music.
The series was a surprise hit when it
debuted, and a second season gave writer/producer Ron Koslow (Moonlight) a
chance to further explore the world of New York Assistant District Attorney
Catherine Chandler (Linda Hamilton, Terminator 2: Judgment Day) and her true
love, Vincent (Ron Perlman, Hellboy), a man-lion creature and his secret
community of outcasts who've made a life for themselves in hidden tunnels far
beneath the city.
Facts of the Case
This episode list for Beauty and the Beast: The
Complete Second Season was found etched on the cavern wall:
• "Chamber
Music"
Vincent is reunited with Rolly, a former tunnel-dweller and musical
prodigy. His life above has led to violence and drug use, and Vincent and
Catherine try to help him get his life back on track.
• "Remember
Love"
When Vincent is distraught over not being able to visit the mountains
for a weekend with Catherine, he falls into despair, until a "guardian angel"
shows him what the world would be like if he'd never been born. Yep, this is
It's a Wonderful Vincent.
• "Ashes, Ashes"
A mysterious plague strikes
the world below, courtesy of a fugitive Russian sailor.
• "Dead of
Winter"
Supervillain Paracelsus (Tony Jay, The Hunchback of Notre Dame)
returns with a sinister, if somewhat impossible, plan to infiltrate the world
below and finish off Vincent once and for all.
• "God Bless the
Child"
A young pregnant woman finds a new home in the tunnels, and she falls
for Vincent. When she learns of his and Catherine's love, she flees, leaving her
newborn baby in the world below.
• "Sticks and Stones"
Laura
(Terrylene Theriot), the deaf girl who left the world below in Season One, has
now ended up with an all-deaf street gang. So Catherine and Vincent must work
together before a bloody gang war claims her life.
• "A Fair and Perfect
Knight"
A young man leaving the tunnels to attend college becomes friends
with Catherine at first, and then finds himself falling in love with
her.
• "Labyrinths"
A boy who lives in Catherine's building secretly
follows her into the tunnels, jeopardizing the secrecy of the underground
community.
• "Brothers"
Vincent's adopted brother Devin (Bruce Abbott,
Re-Animator) makes a return, bringing with him a giant, monstrous man rescued
from a circus. Is the world below big enough for not one, but two,
beasts?
• "A Gentle Rain"
Catherine discovers that a kindhearted
family man living underground is a fugitive wanted for manslaughter. Where are
her loyalties, with the law or with protecting the world below?
• "The
Outsiders"
The series does The Hills Have Vincent when a family of kill-happy
psychopaths invade the tunnels. To stop them, Vincent fears he must unleash his
vicious, animalistic side.
• "Orphans"
When Catherine's father dies,
she contemplates leaving her job and her cushy apartment to become a permanent
resident of the world below. Is she starting a new chapter in her life, or she
hiding from her grief?
• "Arabesque"
This one introduces a prima
ballerina who lived in the tunnels when she was a child. When she returns for a
visit, it stirs a lot of conflicting feelings for Vincent. Long before he met
Catherine, this woman and Vincent were an "item."
• "When the Bluebird
Sings"
When a painter asks Catherine to pose for him, she thinks it's
nothing, but Vincent feels a chill when it happens, due to his psychic
connection with her. Is this artist more than he seems?
• "The
Watcher"
It's time for Silence of the Vincent, when a serial killer stalks
Catherine, getting closer and closer to making his move.
• "A Distant
Shore"
Catherine must travel to Los Angeles for a murder case. Vincent,
sensing her life might be danger, is frustrated by not being able to help her.
Can he find a way?
• "Trial"
While working on a horrific child abuse
case, one in which the child's mother refuses to testify, Catherine wonders if
there is any hope or goodness in the world above.
• "A Kingdom by the
Sea"
Mega-billionaire Elliott Burch (Edward Albert, Falcon Crest) returns,
except that this time he's not out to seduce Catherine, but instead he needs her
help—he's wanted by the CIA for being a threat to national security.
•
"The Hollow Men"
After witnessing a murder in Central Park, Vincent and
Catherine track down the killers, a pair of spoiled rich kids slaughtering
prostitutes for fun. But now Catherine has become their next target.
•
"What Rough Beast"
The three-part season finale starts here, when an
investigative reporter starts putting together the pieces of Vincent's
existence. When he succeeds in capturing Vincent's face on film, it looks like
the whole world will soon learn who Vincent is.
• "Ceremony of
Innocence"
Paracelsus is at his pure evil best when he returns, claiming to
know the secret behind Vincent's birth and parentage. Learning the truth,
though, might push Vincent over the edge.
• "The Rest is
Silence"
Losing more and more control over his violent, animalistic side,
Vincent withdraws from Catherine and his friends below. Can Catherine make a
final, courageous attempt to bring Vincent back from the brink, or have his
inner demons taken full control?
The Evidence
It's fitting that most of the episodes here deal with the
ideals of a community—both in the importance of maintaining a healthy community
as well as the fragility of community, and how easily it can be destroyed. The
world below is a utopia of sorts, led by the wisdom and kindness of Father (Roy
Dotrice, Swimming with Sharks). Almost every underground scene is bathed in a
warm, golden light, giving it a sense of "home." Here, there are no computers,
televisions, or even (gasp!) cell phones. Folks read poetry and Dickens, enjoy
classical music, and derive pleasure from the smallest, simplest things. More
importantly, the world below represents a place where anyone can be themselves
without worry. This includes not only Vincent, but characters like Mouse (David
Greenlee, Digimon: The Movie), a socially backward pickpocket and mischief
maker.
Yet for all the wonders that the world below represents, this
community is a very fragile place. When an adolescent boy finds his way there in
the episode "Labyrinths," the tunnels dwellers are on the verge of panic,
knowing that the word of even this one kid could destroy their peaceful way of
life if he tells the wrong person. The boy is the antagonist of the story not
because he's evil, but because he represents a threat to the world below's
secrecy. This shows that a utopian society cannot just be, instead it must be
carefully maintained and protected.
What, then, do make of this show's
take on the world above? Again, street-level New York City is depicted as a
maelstrom of crime, poverty, drug use, and murder. It seems that a person can't
cross the street without getting brutally beaten by some thug with a perm. I
know it's been cleaned up in recent years, but was New York ever this much of a
savage hellhole? I doubt it. Instead, the creators have upped the raw scariness
of the city to make the world below appear even more like a safe
haven.
"Okay," you're saying, "this sociology stuff is interesting and
all, but what about the plot and characters?" Glad you asked. As with the first
season, the actors immerse themselves in their roles, bringing life and emotion
to romantic lines that could have been laughable in the hands of lesser
performers. Catherine is never once portrayed as merely a "beauty." Instead,
she's smart, caring, and emotionally strong throughout. Vincent might have
introduced Catherine to this amazing underground world, but she's given him a
lot more with her connection to the world above. Her love shows him that there's
more to life than just walking around dark tunnels brooding. As for Vincent,
he's still the wise-beyond-his-years bad-ass with claws we all know and love,
but he goes through quite the ordeal in this season, gradually losing more and
more of himself to his dark, animalistic side. It turns out that the "beast" of
this series is the "beast within." Ron Perlman gives it his all, sometimes
showing Vincent's internal struggle often with only his eyes.
Vincent's
descent into darkness takes center stage during the three-part season ender, but
it's hinted at throughout the season, sometimes in subtle ways. There are a few
instances where Vincent is beating the living french fries out of some gangland
thug, and Catherine has to stop him before he goes too far and gets too violent.
In another episode, though, there's an intriguing scene in which Catherine cuts
her finger on a thorny rose, and Vincent kisses her bloody finger. Is this a
cute, romantic gesture, as in "kiss it and make it better," or is it something
far more ghoulish, as if he's drinking her blood and developing a taste for it?
Even though only the last three episodes are truly serialized, with cliffhangers
and all, the creators hint at what's to come throughout, and they do it nice and
strategically.
The first season provided a nice mix between romantic
longing and Batman-like action, but you should know that this season emphasizes
the dramatics over the slashing of bad guys. Several episodes pass with no
action scenes at all. The show still remains compulsively watchable, with the
characters and their worlds explored in more depth, but it's a little bit less
"superhero" this time around.
After the atrocious "looks like the lens
has been smothered with Crisco" digital transfer of the first season DVDs, I'm
happy to report that the visual quality on these are much improved. It's a much
cleaner, clearer picture overall. That being said, there are many times in which
the video is hazy and grainy, and expect to see some color bleeding in some
spots. Instead of the mono sound from before, this set has been beefed up to a
2.0 stereo track, and just that makes a world of difference. Vincent's lion's
roar booms out of the speakers with gusto, and the opening narration mixes
excellently with theme music, providing an immersive "you are there" feeling.
For extras, a handful of episodes have new introductions with Perlman and
Hamilton. They discuss the overall themes of the episodes, but they also repeat
a lot of the plots and spoil a few endings. I recommend watching the intros
after you watch the episodes and not before.
The Rebuttal Witnesses
Nitpicks:
• When watching several episodes
in a row on DVD, it's immediately evident that establishing shots of New York
are the same few pieces of stock footage over and over.
• Once again, it's an
'80s show, and that means '80s clothes, gigantic '80s hair, women with their
socks on the outside of their pants, etc. I say the show is a product of its
time, so I have no problem seeing past such superficial stuff. Some of you,
however, will be too busy laughing at shoulder pads to enjoy this.
• It still
seems a bit "much" to me that Vincent scales the outside of Catherine's building
to appear on her balcony so often. Is there really not a better way?
Closing Statement
Die-hard fans of this series already know what's to
come in Season Three, and that these DVDs are our last chance to enjoy "classic"
Catherine and Vincent. We'll discuss that season when (if?) that set comes out.
Until then, know that Beauty and the Beast: The Complete Second Season has all
the romance, heroics, and fantasy that have made the series so well-loved over
the years.
The Verdict
Death shall have no dominion. Not guilty.
See the
original at dvdverdict.com
One of the most interesting things about Beauty and the Beast was that the
show's creator and writing team took a great deal of care to ensure that their
hit drama was never mere fluff. In the second season, the show dealt with drugs
and the homeless [in the season opener, Chamber Music, the plot centers around a
former child prodigy who is now an addict on the street]; the loss of a parent
[in Orphans, Catherine's mother dies and she tries to flee the pain by living in
Vincent's world]; loneliness [in A Distant Shore, Catherine follows a murder
case to Los Angeles - 3,000 miles away from Vincent], and in the three-part
season finale [What Rough Beast, Ceremony of Innocence and The Rest Is Silence],
the co-founder of the subterranean civilization returns - to destroy Vincent and
Father.
Throughout its run, Beauty and the Beast managed to deal with all
manner of current issues without being preachy, or ham fisted. It was a
singularly elegant series, shot like a movie [which wasn't often the case in the
eighties] and frequently written in style that approached poetry. Ron Perlman's
Vincent epitomized the romantic hero: strong, intelligent, and wise beyond his
years. Linda Hamilton's Catherine was an eighties woman: fiercely independent,
strong yet compassionate, and as willing to give as to receive.
Their
love was worse than merely starcrossed because they could never really be
together in the romantic sense, yet they were together all the time in terms of
physical proximity. Though Vincent frequently saved Catherine from various
potentially nasty fates, she also saved him from situations that were no less
potentially damning. Somehow, they found a way to make their love work on a
pure, platonic level. And, murders, rapes and various other ills aside, Beauty
and the Beast worked on those levels as well as an adventure
drama.
Season Two may not have had the immediate impact of the first, but
it deepened the Vincent/Catherine relationship in ways that added to the lyrical
quality of the series without ever veering into the maudlin. By season's end,
when Catherine follows the distraught, out-of-control Vincent deeper into the
underworld, the two are so inextricably intertwined - emotionally and
spiritually - that there is nothing else she can do.
The sole feature for
the season two DVD set [which is one more than the season one set] is a series
of introductions to four key episodes by Ron Perlman and Linda Hamilton].
Beauty and the Beast: The Second Season - Grade: A
Features -
Grade: D
Final Grade: A-
See the original at EclipseMagazine.com
See the original at DVD
Empire.com
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST - THE COMPLETE SECOND SEASON (DVD)
Though set in the late-1980s, Beauty and the Beast plays like something
from another era. There's no irony, cynicism, or hip quips to break the spell of
the fantasy (though a little humor would've been nice). Catherine (Linda
Hamilton) loves the beastly, if beneficent Vincent (Ron Perlman) with all her
heart--and vice versa. Together, they're TV's most soft-hearted crime fighters.
To the show's credit, however, they aren't infallible, and there are a few
problems they're unable to solve, whether the issue is drug addiction ("Chamber
Music"), infectious disease ("Ashes, Ashes" with Highlander's Adrian Paul), or
murder ("The Hollow Men"). In retrospect, it's clear that Beauty and the Beast
was a reaction to the "greed is good" era. Vincent and his cave-dwelling
compatriots represent a more compassionate alternative to "topsider" corruption.
Yet all is not harmonious below either. Seriously injured the previous year,
Paracelsus (Tony Jay) becomes a Phantom of the Opera-type figure, who aims to
destroy Vincent's candle-lit utopia. In addition, a less civilized group of
outcasts arrives in "The Outsiders." Fortunately, Vincent has Father (Roy
Dotrice), Mary (Ellen Geer), Mouse (David Greenlee), and Pascal (Star Trek: Deep
Space Nine's Armin Shimerman) on his side. Unfortunately, they won't be able to
prevent the tragedy that occurs in "The Rest Is Silence." Suffice to say, the
season finale sets the scene for a new direction (more is revealed in the
third-season opener). Consequently, Beauty and the Beast was canceled the
following year, but still managed to rack up 18 Emmy nominations (winning six),
spawning a soundtrack, and even inspiring some Saturday Night Live spoofing--a
sure sign it had struck a chord. While the first season was devoid of extras,
Perlman and Hamilton introduce six key episodes on this set.
See the
original at: imdb