Star Trek on VHS

Discussion in 'Star Trek - The Original & Animated Series' started by ClassicTVMan81, Nov 21, 2012.

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  1. ClassicTVMan81

    ClassicTVMan81 Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    I have a question about Star Trek (TOS) on VHS.

    The first round of VHS releases of the individual episodes occurred in February 1985, with episodes 1-10 being released (original air dates were between 9/8/66 and 11/10/66).

    Three months later, episodes 11-21 (original air dates: 11/17/66 to 2/9/67) appeared on VHS.

    The final 18 episodes (original air dates: 11/1/68 to 6/3/69) were released on VHS in June 1988.

    My question is: when were episodes 22 through 61 released? They occurred on various dates between August 1985 and 1988.

    ~Ben
     
  2. Daddy Todd

    Daddy Todd Commodore Commodore

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    I was buying these as they were initially released, and according to my records, the release dates were:
    3/85
    7/85
    11/85
    5/86
    10/86
    10/87
    5/88

    TAS was initially released in 7/89
     
  3. ClassicTVMan81

    ClassicTVMan81 Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    Thank you. But, which episodes of the VHS would correlate with those dates you found?

    I know episodes 1-10 would correlate with the 3/85 date, and episodes 11-21 would correlate with the 7/85 date, and episodes 62-79 with the 5/88 date.

    I'd like to think that TAS was first released on VHS on that date you mentioned, as to coincide with the release of Star Trek V: The Final Frontier.

    ~Ben
     
    Last edited: Nov 23, 2012
  4. Daddy Todd

    Daddy Todd Commodore Commodore

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    They were in 10 episode lots (in production order) until the final set, which was the final 18.

    The first lot was episodes 2-11, then 12-21, 22-31, 32-41, 42-51, 52-61 and 62-79

    Episode 1, the reconstructed version of The Cage (with B&W clips substituting for missing and presumed lost forever color footage) came out in 10/86. It was barely out the door when the missing color footage turned up, thus the "restored" version, tagged Episode 80, came out in 1988, I believe (my records don't include the release date for that, but it premiered on TV in October 1988, as part of a 2-hour special designed to fill up some broadcast slots during the 1988 writer's strike that delayed and abbreviated TNG's second season.)

    The original list price for the single-episode videotapes was $14.95 (except for the double-length The Menagerie, and the reconstructed The Cage, which were $29.95.) The price was reduced to $12.95 with the release of the final 18 episodes. Compare those per-season prices to what we now pay for complete seasons in remastered HD glory on Bluray. Yeah, we're getting a lot better deal these days...

    TAS was released on 11 tapes with 2 episodes each, also at $12.95. Interestingly, the episodes were numbered 1-11 and 13-23. What ever happened to episode 12?
     
    Last edited: Nov 23, 2012
  5. NickintheATL

    NickintheATL Lieutenant Commander Red Shirt

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    The all-color version of The Cage was on the box as episode 99, not episode 80.
     
  6. mb22

    mb22 Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    I dunno. I recall distinctly that while the production order numbers were indicated on the box spines, the groups released were in airdate order.
     
  7. mb22

    mb22 Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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  8. ClassicTVMan81

    ClassicTVMan81 Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    This promo would date from the summer of 1985, since it was then that episodes 12-21 were newly released on VHS (episodes 2-11 were released in February 1985).

    ~Ben
     
  9. Daddy Todd

    Daddy Todd Commodore Commodore

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    D'OH! That's right. I don't have the tapes out any more (I may not even HAVE them any more) and was going from memory.

    OK, I give up! My memory is failing! This is correct; they were numbered in production order, but released in broadcast order. Which bugged the hell out of me at the time. Like, WHY??
     
  10. ClassicTVMan81

    ClassicTVMan81 Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    I want to thank you for providing me with this information. So, to clarify things, these are the release dates:

    Episodes 2-11: February 1985
    Episodes 12-21: June 1985
    Episodes 22-31: October 1985
    Episodes 32-41: April 1986
    Episodes 1, 42-51: September 1986
    Episodes 52-61: September 1987
    Episodes 62-79: April 1988

    ~Ben
     
  11. Daddy Todd

    Daddy Todd Commodore Commodore

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    Well, no. Broadcast order, not production order.

    Here's when I bought the single-episode tapes:
    March 1985: 6, 8, 2, 7 ,5, 4, 10, 12, 11, 3
    July 1985: 16, 13, 9, 17, 14, 18, 19, 21, 15, 22
    November 1985: 24, 23, 25, 26, 27, 20, 28, 29, 34, 33
    May 1986: 37, 39, 38, 35, 30, 41, 31, 44, 32, 40
    September 1986: 47, 36, 42, 46, 49, 48, 45, 51, 52, 50, 1*
    September 1987: 54, 53, 43, 55, 61, 59, 58, 60, 62, 56
    May 1988: 66, 65, 64, 67, 68, 63, 57, 71, 70, 72, 69, 73, 76, 75, 74, 77, 78, 79

    * Episode 1 was clearly out of sequence here; it was a special release for the 20th anniversary. It had never been broadcast at that point.

    The concept we now have of a "release date" simply didn't exist in the nascent consumer home video market back then. Paramount really created that market through it's aggressive pricing of Star Trek tapes in the '80's. Releasing Star Trek II and Star Trek: The Motion Picture (Special Longer Version) at "sell-through" pricing of $39.95 was unheard-of in 1983. Videocassettes were selling for around $100 a pop at that time, and were aimed at the rental market. NOBODY in Hollywood thought that fans would want to build a library of their favorite movies -- much less episodes of old TV shows -- until Paramount proved the market existed with Star Trek.

    When Paramount started releasing these on videocassette, there were two places to buy: old-school electronics & camera stores who were brave enough to stock a few copies, and video rental stores that would special-order them for insane fans (like me.) When "Media" stores (Like Media Play and Suncoast) started opening up around the turn of the '90's, I was ecstatic. Up till that time, I could expect to pay list price for every video I bought. It was a nice change.

    So, the idea of an exact "release date" gets kind of iffy when we go back to the '80's. Nobody was trying to make these available to eager purchasers on day of release, so they would trickle out when the shopkeepers got around to shelving them. That's probably why I was not able to buy these until the month after "official" release, in most cases.

    Keep in mind that, years before releasing individual episodes, Paramount released 5 or so double-episode tapes (at the usual $100 a tape) of selected episodes for video rental stores. They also released a single-episode tape of "Space Seed" in 1982, to capitalize on the success of TWoK. I don't know when these came out; I don't even know what was on the tapes, apart from my recollection that one included both parts of "The Menagerie" with the end credits of Part I and the teaser/opening credits of Part II edited out to make it look like a "feature-length" movie.
     
  12. BoredShipCapt'n

    BoredShipCapt'n Rear Admiral Rear Admiral

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    Actually, most movies were nowhere near $100 a tape. The first film to come out with that exorbitant pricetag on VHS was Star Wars in 1982, at $125, and by that time consumers buying movies on tape was common enough that 20th Century-Fox added the paranoid touch of calling it an "indefinite rental" just in case they regretted making that valuable property available for sale and decided to... I dunno, activate a homing beacon and call them all in?

    The 5 double-episode Star Trek tapes were released in 1980. I got a couple of them by special order through a video store in 1981 and they were around $20 or $25 each. The episodes included were:

    Volume 1: The Menagerie
    Volume 2: Amok Time/Journey to Babel
    Volume 3: The Enterprise Incident/The Immunity Syndrome
    Volume 4: The Trouble with Tribbles/Let That Be Your Last Battlefield
    Volume 5: Balance of Terror/The City on the Edge of Forever

    (I should also add that the videotape catalog "Movies Unlimited" has been in the business of selling to consumers since 1978.)
     
    Last edited: Nov 26, 2012
  13. mb22

    mb22 Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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    It might also be noted that Betamax versions of all the episodes were also realese together with the VHS ones.
     
  14. ClassicTVMan81

    ClassicTVMan81 Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    A question about the 1993 reissues (for episodes in seasons 1-2): on the Desilu-era episodes, is it true that the 1984 Paramount "Blue Mountain" logo still follows the 1966 Desilu logo?

    And (regarding the '93 tapes) on those S2 episodes aired since "A Piece of the Action," is the early 1968 Paramount TV "Rising Circle" logo (has a darker blue BG than the '70s-'80s Paramount TV "Blue Mountain" logo) is intact?

    ~Ben
     
  15. mb22

    mb22 Fleet Captain Fleet Captain

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  16. Dude111

    Dude111 Lieutenant Red Shirt

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    I love my VHS collection of Star trek!!!

    Most of my tapes were done BEFORE 1990 which was excellent as they were all transferred in thier original analog masters.... (They are exactly as I remember them on TV) There are a couple that have print dates in 1990 on them (Some of those dont look as nice (I think some companies starting compromising thier VHS media in 1990 (No matter what they transferred)))


    I am very much one for PURITY and I love analogue!!!! -- Nothing looks or sounds as nice in my opinion......... (My set was done by CBS VIDEO LIBRARY) (Paramount)

    :)
     
    Last edited: Dec 10, 2014
  17. 1001001

    1001001 Serial Canon Violator Moderator

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    This thread is over two years old.

    Let's let it rest in peace.

    [​IMG]

    "Hailing Frequencies Closed"
     
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