Cheap NFL Films - Super Bowl Collections - Super Bowl I-X (DVD) Price
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| CATEGORY: | DVD |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 01 January, 2003 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Warner Home Video |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Color |
| TYPE: | Sports Highlights |
| MEDIA: | DVD |
| # OF MEDIA: | 5 |
| UPC: | 085393795825 |
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Customer Reviews of NFL Films - Super Bowl Collections - Super Bowl I-X
Super Bowl and NFL Flims on DVD--At Last! At long last, NFL Flims has released a DVD on the Super Bowls. It is complete with NFL Flims narration of the first ten games, unedited and without commercial breaks (unlike when ESPN, ESPN2 or ESPN Classic shows them). Plus, the bonus:
Seasonal recaps from 1966-1975 and extra features.
Now bring on Super Bowls XI-XX!
Super DVD!
This DVD is excellent. Not only do you get the first 10 Super Bowl films uncut, but you also have season highlight films from that Super Bowl year. I also liked "They Call it Pro Football" which was the first film John Facenda narrated for NFL Films. The extra features were interesting too. I can not hardly wait for Super Bowl XI-XX to be released.
Context is key to success for Super Bowl set
For fans who are very familiar with NFL Films' Super Bowl highlights after countless marathon viewings right before each year's big game, the main draw of this five-disc set is having the added context of the annual season-in-review films. The 1966 season isn't really summarized in "They Call It Pro Football," the feature preceeding Super Bowl I, but beginning with "1967," we get some sense of how the conference champions reached the Super Bowl. Also interesting to see are the very good playoff teams that came up short.
Some of the season-in-review films take the straightforward approach of explaining which teams won each division, and briefly recap what happened to the also-rans. This is true of the 1967, 1969 and 1970 features. In other years, the approach is less direct, as a look at the season's outstanding rookies, strategies or units segues into a discussion of the teams. Key playoff games are generally highlighted, including many classics, such as 1967's "Ice Bowl" between the Green Bay Packers and Dallas Cowboys, the 1969 Minnesota Vikings-Los Angeles Rams divisional playoff, the Miami Dolphins-Kansas City Chiefs overtime thriller in 1971, and the Dallas-Minnesota showdown in 1975.
The extra features are all very short, and some of them will be familiar to viewers of "NFL Films Presents" and other NFL Films programs.
The Super Bowls themselves are presented in the traditional, effective NFL Films style, making even lackluster contests compelling through thorough explanations of strategy, Sam Spence's celebrated music scores, and John Facenda's classic narration.
The fascinating season-in-review footage underscores the need for a comprehensive release of annual highlight films, at least for the dominant teams of the last few decades, as I said in a review of "NFL Films Inside the Vault: Vols. 1-3." I have not seen the "History Of" DVD sets on the Dallas Cowboys and Green Bay Packers, but it does appear that these, taken together with the "Super Bowl I-X" set, represent a definite step in the right direction.