The Streets of San Francisco - Season 1, Vol. 2



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The Streets of San Francisco - Season 1, Vol. 2

 The Streets of San Francisco - Season 1, Vol. 2

List Price: $38.99
You Pay Only: $22.99
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: PARAMOUNT PICTURES
EAN: 0097361227641
Format: Box set, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
Label: Paramount
Manufacturer: Paramount
Number Of Items: 4
Publisher: Paramount
Region Code: 1
Release Date: September 25, 2007
Running Time: 675 minutes
Sales Rank: 16485
Studio: Paramount
Theatrical Release Date: September 16, 1972




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Editorial Review:

Product Description:
Twenty year veteran Detective Lt. Mike Stone is partnered with young college educated Inspector Steve Keller who has a lot to learn about being a police detective on the Streets of San Francisco.System Requirements:TRT: 675 Mins.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: TELEVISION/SERIES & SEQUELS Rating: NR UPC: 097361227641 Manufacturer No: 122764

Amazon.com:
These 13 chronological episodes that concluded season 1 were just the ticket to launching one of the 1970s' most arresting cop shows. The first season of The Streets of San Francisco was nominated for an Emmy for Best Drama Series and its stars, Karl Malden and Michael Douglas, were nominated for Best Actor and Best Supporting Actor, respectively. But as this inaugural season unfolded, the veteran cop/rookie cop dynamic that charged the first 14 episodes matured into a more paternal mentor/student relationship (Malden's Mike Stone refers to Douglas's Steve Keller, throughout as 'the boy' and 'buddy-boy'). These episodes are particularly engrossing, and provide Malden with some of his finest primetime hours. In 'Trail of the Serpent,' a street gang bent on freeing their captured leader takes Stone hostage. Stone plays it cool, appealing to the humanity of one of the more sensitive gang members, while the more hotheaded Keller almost jeopardizes his rescue. In 'Legion of the Lost,' Stone goes undercover on skid row to investigate the murders of three homeless men. In two episodes, Stone does not allow personal relationships to compromise his sense of duty. In 'Deadline,' a newspaper editor tries to cover up the murder of his mistress, and in the process, unwittingly implicates his own son, who was also the victim's lover. In 'Shattered Image,' a woman from Stone's old neighborhood is now the socialite wife of a murdered senatorial candidate. 'Beyond Vengeance' echoes Cape Fear as a vengeful sociopath, freed on parole, seems to be stalking Stone's daughter.

Malden and Douglas are a terrific team, and they are aided and abetted by literate scripts ('Room with a View' alludes to Hemingway's story 'The Killers'), with clever twists. In 'The Albatross,' a killer is freed when it turns out he wasn't wearing his hearing aid and did not hear Keller when he read him his rights. In the Emmy-nominated 'The House on Hyde Street,' an elderly recluse becomes the prime neighborhood suspect in the death of a young boy. Guest stars in these episodes read like a Hollywood's Most Wanted List, with veteran character actors (Joseph Cotten, Jack Albertson, Leslie Nielsen, Barbara Rush) and future TV Land favorites (Victor French from Little House on the Prairie and Highway to Heaven, a pre-Cheers Nicholas 'Coach' Colasanto, Jamie Farr, and Clint Howard). Of course, the real star is San Francisco, an intriguing backdrop with its roller coaster hills and funky neighborhoods. For series fans who left their hearts here, Streets still calls to you. --Donald Liebenson



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Just a Terrific TV Police Show!
As a City of San Francisco aficionado, I was delighted to see the release of "Streets of San Francisco" and the DVD did not disappoint me.
Karl Malden and Michael Douglas are terrific actors, the guest stars in the episodes are all believable and solid, there are some great visual shots of The City (not as many as in season two), and the writing and plotting are as good (if not better) than any series produced now, about 35 years later.
Fans of the police TV series genre will (and should) snap this up, sit back and enjoy.




Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Outstanding police procedural drama - great cast and locations
Streets of San Francisco was superior to most Quinn Martin detective shows, in part because of the great chemistry between its lead characters but also because a detective and sidekick always works better dramatically: the team of Holmes and Watson always worked better than solo detectives Hercule Poirot or Miss Marple, for example. But far more mysterious than any of the Quinn Martin plot lines is why these outstanding TV shows have taken so long to be released on video. In 1998 a handful of episodes were released only on VHS, even when that format had clearly been displaced by DVD. And presumably the manufacturing cost of DVD is a fraction of VHS duplication, so this further adds to the mystery. Even so, those VHS tapes were a vast improvement over the fuzzy, grainy, cut-for-more-commercial-time versions on TV rerun channels. But this DVD set is better still. The colors are bright and the titles are razor sharp. It probably didn't look this good on first-run network TV. The cover art says "some episodes may be edited from their original network versions," but I can see scenes that have been missing from reruns for many decades. There are no DVD extras but there are English/Spanish Subtitles and a Spanish audio track. With only 4 discs, (on the Volume 1-2 set) and a list price of $80, the collection is grossly overpriced when more contemporary shows cost a half or a third that price, and almost always include some value-added content. But if you're a SSF fan, it may well be worth the premium ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Streets of San Francisco
it is so good to see this wonderful TV series coming to DVD - I am impatient to see the entire series released. Amazon, as always, sent it quickly and efficiently and I had a lovely weekend revisiting one of my all time favourite old TV shows.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Many Stars Guest Star in This Show
Buy this DVD since Judith McConnell who is Best known for her role of Sophia Capwell in the soap opera Santa Barbara Guest starred in The Streets Of San Francisco episode Act Of Duty playing a police woman.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Geat!!!!!!
I am very thrilled with CBS/Paramount on the dvd release of this classic cop show from the 70s.Like one reviewer said i am very pleased with the price.



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