Doctor Who: The Movie, at least on this side of the Atlantic
:Plays the "Song of the South" card:
Disney has completely disowned the exsistance of this movie.
Other than using a song from it as their company's "theme" for a number of years.
Popeye Meets The Man Who Hated Laughter - Flash Gordon, Mandrake, Lothar and The Phantom join forces. Sound at all familiar? But in this case, the innocents they must rescue are threatened not by Ming, but by a mad scientist who has kidnapped Popeye (Olive's whining lost him his spinach), Dagwood+Blondie, Hi+Lois, Snuffy Smith and a host of other funny paper favorites. Worth it for the sheer kick factor. (Though its been a seriously long time since for me)
There was at least one studio (I forget the name of) that was throw away masters to shows and music, to make room. And another that recorded over stuff.
Some things just may not exist anymore.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0256274/Popeye Meets The Man Who Hated Laughter - Flash Gordon, Mandrake, Lothar and The Phantom join forces. Sound at all familiar? But in this case, the innocents they must rescue are threatened not by Ming, but by a mad scientist who has kidnapped Popeye (Olive's whining lost him his spinach), Dagwood+Blondie, Hi+Lois, Snuffy Smith and a host of other funny paper favorites. Worth it for the sheer kick factor. (Though its been a seriously long time since for me)
Are we sure this isn't just some dream/acid trip you had?![]()
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0256274/Popeye Meets The Man Who Hated Laughter - Flash Gordon, Mandrake, Lothar and The Phantom join forces. Sound at all familiar? But in this case, the innocents they must rescue are threatened not by Ming, but by a mad scientist who has kidnapped Popeye (Olive's whining lost him his spinach), Dagwood+Blondie, Hi+Lois, Snuffy Smith and a host of other funny paper favorites. Worth it for the sheer kick factor. (Though its been a seriously long time since for me)
Are we sure this isn't just some dream/acid trip you had?![]()
http://www.retrojunk.com/details_movies/2303-popeye-meets-the-man-who-hated-laughter/
http://www.crazedfanboy.com/npcr06/crisispcr321.html
Fans of the show - classic Who, that is, back in the 60s when VCRs didn't exist, never mind PVRs or anything else along those lines.who the hell audio records Dr Who?
People used to do the same thing with Trek episodes during the original run of TOS.who the hell audio records Dr Who?
Indeed, back in the day, kiddies, that was the only way to reexperience the show whenever you wanted. You couldn't watch it again and again, but you could at least listen to it. Stone knives and bearskins! Can you imagine what the world was like before we even had portable tape recorders...?Fans of the show - classic Who, that is, back in the 60s when VCRs didn't exist, never mind PVRs or anything else along those lines.who the hell audio records Dr Who?
Reel-to-reel, baby!Indeed, back in the day, kiddies, that was the only way to reexperience the show whenever you wanted. You couldn't watch it again and again, but you could at least listen to it. Stone knives and bearskins! Can you imagine what the world was like before we even had portable tape recorders...?Fans of the show - classic Who, that is, back in the 60s when VCRs didn't exist, never mind PVRs or anything else along those lines.who the hell audio records Dr Who?
Well, it had a handle, yeah.^Well, that's portable, isn't it?![]()
"Got an air check we can listen to, son?"I'm acquainted with an old-timer who happens to be one of the major voice-over artists for movie trailers and TV promos. He told me the amusing anecdote of how, back ca. 1950 when he was doing TV and radio announcer work, he used to have to lug a wire recorder around NYC to play samples of his work for potential employers!
Actually, there's no Who episode that's missing entirely. For every episode that doesn't exist on film, there is an audio recording of some quality.One of the most infamous instances is the BBC in the 1970s, which destroyed the masters of dozens of old Doctor Who episodes from the William Hartnell & Patrick Troughton years. Some episodes currently exist only in audio format. Some are lost entirely except in the Target novelizations.
My understanding is that McCartney is the roadblock in a DVD release of Let It Be. He's said that reopening the issue is "painful," and Neil Aspinall said, before his death, that restoring the film was "controversial." (Also note that the least thorough portion of The Beatles Anthology is the segment on 1969. It's almost as though the Beatles didn't want to talk about it. The book isn't much better on that front.)I don't know if the Beatles film Let It Be counts, as it was available on Betamax way back when....Fans have been looking forward to this since the Anthology days, when VHS was still dominant, with the hope that they'd restore it to its original aspect ratio.
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