Articles and reviews appearing
in conjunction with the release of
Beauty and the Beast Season Two on DVD.



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From Monster&Critics.com:

By Jeff Swindoll

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



From cduniverse.com:

Beauty and the Beast - The Complete Second Season DVD

A time-tested fairytale received a modern-day update--and made an unlikely sex symbol of bearish actor Ron Perlman--in the late-1980s television drama BEAUTY AND THE BEAST. Created by Ron Koslow (BIRDS OF PREY), the series centered on the love between New York district attorney Catherine Chandler (Linda Hamilton, THE TERMINATOR) and a deformed but chivalric man-beast named Vincent (Perlman, CITY OF LOST CHILDREN), who lived in the city's labyrinthine underground passageways along with an entire community of fellow outcasts. As Catherine's crime-fighting duties frequently placed her in mortal danger, Vincent was there to save her from harm and share a star-crossed love that could never be consummated, providing the series with much of its achingly romantic appeal. Fueled by equal parts mystery, romance, and fantasy, BEAUTY AND THE BEAST is resurrected in this collection that presents the series' second season in its entirety.

See the original review at cduniverse.com



From Movieweb.com:

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST: THE COMPLETE SECOND SEASON
by BRIAN GALLAGHER

THE GOOD
Delightful performances from Perlman and Hamilton...

THE BAD
... that really seem to go nowhere with the storyline. Special features sucked too.

THE FLICK
Do you remember before Ron Perlman was known as Hellboy and before Linda Hamilton was known almost exclusively as the ass-kicking Sarah Connor from the first two Terminator flicks? Well, before all that for these two actors, there was this: Beauty and the Beast, the show that put both of them on the map, although moreso for Perlman, who won a Golden Globe for his work in this season and was nominated for an Emmy in the first two seasons. Well get ready to take a blast back to the syrupy past with this second season of Beauty and the Beast.

I remember the show from when I was a kid. Not watching it, really, but I remember catching glimpses of this weird-looking lion thing when my moms would watch it. I can tell now that I really didn't miss much. Perlman and Hamilton do both deserve acclaim for their performances as Vincent, the man-beast who lives in an oddly-lavish tunnel system and Catherine, a tough-ish assistant DA in New York City. I'm really surprised, however, that this was such a critically acclaimed series back in the day.

Creator/writer Ron Koslow seems to be more about the music and theatrics, more about creating a symphony rather than a television show. The beauty of this shows throughout, but the beast of it is that it can be some pretty boring stuff a lot of the time. The few sporadic bits of humor they try to sprinkle in here and there are laughless and the brunt of the writing seems to be devoted to cornball romantic sentiment, and not so much concerned with an actual story arc or plotline.

It seems that the wonderful performances from Hamilton and Perlman seem to just slightly balance out the story work here... but I'm talking about the slightest of balance.

THE FEATURES
Lame. All they have here are some Video Introductions by Linda Hamilton and Ron Perlman before selected episodes. They only have these intros on five of the 22 episodes and while we get maybe a decent tidbit here and there, they're mostly worthless. Other features wouldn't hurt, either...

THE LOOK
This six-disc set is presented in the fullscreen format, in the 1.33:1 aspect ratio.

THE SOUND
The sound is presented through the Dolby Digital Stereo format.

THE PACKAGING
While the outside of the case is boring (a shot of the title pair on the front, random shots, synopsis, tech specs on the back) they did come up with a unique way to fit six discs into a standard keep-case package. There is a disc on each side of the case, and two flipper things with a disc on each side of that. Also, the disc case is clear so on the inside you can see the full episode guide on the backside of the artwork. A pretty slick package here, folks.

FINAL WORD
If you own a lot of Danielle Steel or romance novels, this should surely be for you. If you have a girlfriend who owns a lot of Danielle Steel or romance novels, this should surely be a good gift for you to get her. If you like Ron Perlman a LOT, this is for you. If you don't fall into any of these categories, this probably isn't your bag, baby.

See the original at Movieweb.com



From dvdfile.com:

Beauty and the Beast: The Second Season
Written by Mike Restaino
Friday, 27 July 2007
Paramount Pictures Home Entertainment / 1988-1989 / 1043 Minutes / Unrated
Street Date: July 7, 2007

I had a girlfriend in college who loved the TV series Beauty and the Beast. I mean, she loved it. I don’t know where she is today, but when we were at our thickest, she was really into Anne McCaffrey fantasy novels, the music of Portishead, and Beauty and the Beast.

She had VHS tapes of all the series episodes, too, but I never had any inclination to watch them. The photos of Linda Hamilton draped all over her dog-faced love (Ron Perlman) looked like romance novel covers and I simply wanted no part of it. (And with my stubborn tastes, she knew that if she forced the show on me, it was likely to be an exercise in torture.)

So it’s with a small degree of nostalgia that I’ve been watching episodes from Beauty and the Beast: The Second Season. And in honor of that lovely ex-girlfriend, I decided to truly and earnestly give the show a shot. Come on, how bad could it be? Well, if I were to phrase my review in one word, it would be: yikes.

Basically, the set-up is this. Catherine (Linda Hamilton), a big-shot lawyer and about-town socialite, was kidnapped and beaten up by some thugs at the beginning of season one. She was rescued by a guy named Vincent (Ron Perlman), who looks like the lovechild of Fabio and a lion (I’m not kidding). Of course this New York City attorney and this David Coverdale-lookin’ fellow fall deeply and passionately in love with one another. Alas, not only will their respective worlds forbid their amorous intentions, they really can’t be together; sexual intimacy is a no-no. (Take that, lion boy!)

This second season finds our lovers having problems upon problems. Catherine’s legal cases don’t go the way she planned. Vincent has trouble keeping up with various uncouth visitors to his underground lair, referred to as the tunnels. They never seem to be truly together for very long. It really is like a terrible romance novel come to life. And even episode-long storylines end up being ludicrously silly. The episode in which a deaf tunnel denizen teams up with a West Side Story-esque deaf street gang is only marginally less embarrassing than an episode when a cranky Dungeons & Dragons player happens upon the tunnels.

But who am I kidding? My snobbish, pooh-poohing sensibilities aren’t anywhere near the kind of demographic Beauty and the Beast is targeting. I suppose to certain viewers, there is a palpably involving love affair at the center of the show – talk about falling in love with a boy you’d have trouble bringing home to mom and dad. Beauty and the Beast may be meant for a very specific fan base, but it hasn’t aged well. It’s difficult to take Sarah Connor – damn, I mean Linda Hamilton – seriously when she’s dressed like a rich Pretty in Pink background extra.

I guarantee that my ex is deathly jealous that I got a chance to write a review of Beauty and the Beast: The Second Season. I’m sure she would have relished the opportunity to share with the world just how exceptional she found the show’s merits, but she ain’t here, so I can scream at the top of my lungs: yikes!

The Video: How Does The Disc Look?

Beauty and the Beast gets a typical 1980s TV-on-DVD video treatment. These 1.33:1 transfers lack the kind of crispness and accurate color representation that have been afforded to more recent television series. But black levels are relatively consistent, and there aren’t a ton of artifacts nor is there exceptionally noticeable dirt and grime on the transfer prints, although such flaws do pop up every once in a while. Although not impeccable, these presentations will look as good (perhaps moderately better) than you remember.

The Audio: How Does The Disc Sound?

There is not a lot of breadth to these stereo mixes; they’re basically mono tracks, really. But they serve the show well enough. Dialogue comes across fairly well, and while the show’s groaningly overcooked musical score is not exactly top-notch, it doesn’t mask other elements in the mix. I’ve heard better late-‘80s TV-on-DVD sound mixes; I’ve heard worse.

Included are English Closed Captions.

Supplements: What Goodies Are There?

We get a handful of video introductions to some shows by Ron Perlman and Linda Hamilton. I guess that’s better than nothing, but they don’t offer much additional content to diehard fans.

Exclusive DVD-ROM Features: What happens when you pop the disc into your PC?

There are no DVD-ROM features on this DVD.

Final Thoughts

If you loved Beauty and the Beast, you probably hate me by now, so get back at me by making this second season DVD release a bestseller, why don’t you? Sure, the audio and video qualities aren’t stellar, but they serve the series well, and while I’m sure a commentary track or even a featurette would make series devotees purr with delight, the video introductions by Hamilton and Perlman are a small perks. For fans only.
.

See the original at dvdfile.com



From dvdverdict.com:

Case Number 11744

Beauty And The Beast: The Complete Second Season
Paramount // 1988 // 1043 Minutes // Not Rated
Reviewed by Appellate Judge Mac McEntire // July 25th, 2007

Of course, if anyone else calls you "beast," Appellate Judge Mac McEntire will rip their lungs out.



The Charge
Joe: "I'm just saying, maybe you're attracted to the wrong type."
Catherine: "I don't think what I'm attracted to can be called a 'type.'"


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



From MovieFreak.com:

Beauty and the Beast - Second Season

Paramount Home Entertainment || Not Rated || July 10, 2007

Reviewed by Rachel Sexton



How Does The DVD Stack Up?

CONTENT
9 (out of 10)

THE VIDEO
8 (out of 10)

THE AUDIO
8 (out of 10)

THE EXTRAS
6 (out of 10)

OVERALL
8 (out of 10)


SYNOPSIS
In contemporary New York City, assistant district attorney Catherine (Linda Hamilton) has just shared her first kiss with her soul mate, a noble half man-half beast named Vincent (Ron Perlman) who lives in a society deep underground. Their love is now acknowledged between them but the work they do together to help those in both their societies is still also important in their lives.


CRITIQUE
Love stories on television typically have much more time than those on film to trace every ebb and flow of a romance, especially if a series continues for many seasons. This time provides particularly fertile ground for an unconventional pairing, such as the one in the series Beauty and the Beast. After a first season of detailing the development of the love between Catherine and Vincent, the creative minds behind the series push the couple into the obstacles that an actual relationship between them would entail. Beauty and the Beast has a second season full of thoughtful plotting, often breathless romance, and effective drama.

The first season ended with a kiss, so the premiere of season two sees the pair together. The unorthodox union, though, requires that no one else in Catherine’s world know. As in season one, there are various people, from the world above and the world below, who will need assistance from these two extraordinary people. The structure of the series is essentially built around this, with certain episodes taking on a longer story arc. For example, the final few episodes carry on from one earlier in the season, featuring an effective villain from Vincent’s world called Paracelsus. This character is in fact a crucial part of the development of Vincent’s character in this season, as he provokes Vincent to kill him. Subsequently, Vincent struggles physically and psychically with the beast half of his nature. The season has quite an interesting cliffhanger.

Otherwise, the qualities of the series continue high in quality from the previous season. The acting is still outstanding, while Hamilton and Perlman are able to deepen their characters’ bond. Perlman particularly gets to truly impress late in the season. The production values are still only a bit dated, mostly in the costuming of Catherine’s character. Again, great culture, in the form of poetry, classical music, and even painting, is espoused as a height to aspire to, refreshingly. There is also a consistency to the direction that allows the season to feel cohesive within itself and with the first season. To top it all off, everything supports the central romance. Beauty and the Beast seems to evolve in plot and theme in its second season, still never losing sight of the effective love story.

THE VIDEO
Beauty and the Beast is presented in fullscreen that preserves the picture of the original television exhibition.

THE AUDIO
Beauty and the Beast is presented in Dolby Digital Stereo, and it is actually good for a series this old on DVD. There are no other language tracks or subtitles, however.

THE EXTRAS
Episode Introductions: Lead actors Hamilton and Perlman speak together before certain episodes about the show to follow. The two really get into the themes of the series, what each episode really has to say about the characters and the love story itself. I particularly like how Perlman says that creator Koslow wrote like chamber music then came in with the first episode script of the second season called “Chamber Music.” Hamilton also compliments Perlman’s ability in the season’s finale “The Rest is Silence.” These are great-- watch them.

FINAL THOUGHTS
The second season of Beauty and the Beast is successful, with story and acting emphasizing the romance and its maturation. The viewing of this 6-disc set will definitely prompt many to want to see the third season. There is also an excellent extra included with this set, and new fans may even discover this series thanks to DVD. Fans will absolutely buy, but many should at least rent this set (after seeing Season One!)

VERDICT: RECOMMENDED


See the original at MovieFreak.com



From Eclipse Magazine:

TVonDVD:
Beauty and the Beast, Season Two
Submitted by Sheldon A. Wiebe on Thu, 2007-07-12 17:54

The second season of Beauty and The Beast finally addressed the question: if you have a Beast in your show, what is it that makes him bestial?

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



From dvdempire.com

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.


See the original at DVD Empire.com



From Television Heaven:
(review of the show as a whole, including the not yet released Third Season)

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST

One of the most unusual and charming fantasy romances ever to reach prime time US screens, Beauty and the Beast was a modern day gothic romance set against the often violent, always bustling backdrop of New York City.

Created by Ron Koslow and executive produced by the award winning team of Paul Junger Witt and Tony Thomas, the series premiered on the CBS network in September 1987 and ran for three seasons until August 1990. The basic premise for the series was simple, but effective: Catherine Chandler (a pre Terminator, Linda Hamilton, was a young assistant District Attorney from a privileged background who had been brutally attacked by criminals and left to die in Central Park. It was there that she was found by Vincent, (noted stage and film character actor, Ron Perlman, enjoying a rare leading role), a powerful man-beast with the soul of a poet but the facial features of a lion, who lived in a strange, hidden world of caverns and tunnels deep beneath Manhattan Island. Vincent took badly injured Catherine to this underground haven and with the help of "Father", the leader of the unsuspected community (British actor Roy Dotrice), he nursed her back to health. Later, following her full recovery, Catherine returned to her life on the surface world, but not before forming a mystical bond with her rescuer, who she had fallen in love with, despite his beastly outer appearance and the vast differences in their worlds. (Ron Perlman's elaborate, wholly convincing beast make-up was created by Academy Award winning effects genius Rick Baker).

From this basic scenario, the production team fashioned an almost hypnotically compelling blend of romance and crime drama which used Catherine's position as a DA to place her in moments of physical danger which would bring the idealized romantic figure of Vincent to the surface world as a dark and dangerous guardian angel.

During its second season the series shifted its focus slightly as the central characters spent considerable time with the inhabitants of the Tunnel World, where Catherine had now finally been accepted as a protector and friend. More people from the outside world turned up for emotional support and healing in the Tunnel World's welcomingly secure environment, while with the added input of award winning fantasy novelist George R.R. Martin, the show began to explore and expand on its internal mythology. Deep in mourning following her father's death, Catherine decided to abandon the upper world and move full-time to the Tunnel World, but eventually realised that despite her love for Vincent, her destiny belonged with the surface world. The season-ending three-parter closed with an emotionally distraught Vincent, who was the unwitting victim of stealthy manipulation by an unsuspected villain, fleeing into the depths with Catherine following.

When the series returned for its abbreviated third season late in 1989, Linda Hamilton had announced her decision to leave the series. A decision that would have serious repercussions for the show's continued survival. In an exciting resolution to the previous season's cliff-hanger, Catherine rescued Vincent from his inner demons but was kidnapped by Gabriel, (Stephen McHattie), the ruthless head of a huge criminal empire she had been investigating, which was trying to corrupt the D.A.'s office. She was killed, but not before giving birth to Vincent's son, who was held hostage by the evil Gabriel.

It was at this point that the producers introduced a new female interest for the man-beast hoping to recreate the powerful chemistry that had existed from the outset between Hamilton and Perlman. Catherine's boss and close friend, Joe Maxwell, (Jay Acavone) hired Diana Bennett, (Jo Anderson), a private investigator, to track down Catherine's killer. And, quite naturally, her investigation ultimately led her to the shadowy, now darkly obsessed and grieving Vincent. Although still astonishingly popular with its dedicated group of core fans (comprising mostly of women), the darker, more resolutely violent aspects of the rework concept, coupled with the fatal loss of the all-important central relationship between Catherine and Vincent ultimately led to the series' cancellation.

At it's peak, Beauty and the Beast was an imaginative, sensitively written and wonderfully played modern day urban romantic fairly tale which deftly combined elements from disparate genres into a sweepingly exciting and thoughtful whole.

See the original at: TelevisionHeaven.co.uk.com



From AmazonScience Books:
 
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST - THE SECOND SEASON
Product Description
The Beauty and the Beast TV show was a fantasy series about a man-beast (Vincent) and his love for a beautiful assistant district attorney (Catherine Chandler). Vincent lived in an underground world beneath New York City where his gruesome looks were less important to his peers than were his caring and benevolent personality. Together, Vincent and Catherine had many adventures both above and below ground level and their love for each other continued to grow.


Product Details
Amazon Sales Rank: #364 in DVD
Released on: 2007-07-10
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
Formats: Full Screen, NTSC
Original language: Spanish
Number of discs: 6
Running time: 1043 minutes


Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
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.
--Kathleen C. Fennessy




See the original at: Cantonrep.com



From imdb:

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



From Creative Loafing


Beauty and the Beast: The Second Season

BY MATT BRUNSON
Published 07.11.07

BEAUTY AND THE BEAST: THE SECOND SEASON (1988-1989).

More a cult hit than an out-and-out ratings success, CBS' offbeat prime-time offering was deemed worthy enough to be brought back for another season, a move that resulted in a second straight Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Drama Series as well as nods for stars Linda Hamilton and Ron Perlman. Building on the spiritual love between Catherine Chandler, an assistant district attorney in New York, and Vincent, an underground dweller with leonine features and a poetic soul, the second season also examines various challenges that confront the pair, including Catherine's trip to the West Coast, Vincent's ongoing battle with the villainous Paracelcus (Tony Jay), and, in the season's cliffhanging episodes, Vincent's struggle to control his violent animal nature.

DVD extras in this six-disc, 22-episode set include video introductions by Hamilton and Perlman on six episodes, and previews for other TV shows on DVD.

Season: ***

Extras: *1/2



See the original at: Creative Loafing