Showing posts with label biography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biography. Show all posts

Mickey Mantle: The American Dream Comes To Life® - The Deluxe Lost Stories Edition (1993) Review

Mickey Mantle: The American Dream Comes To LifeĀ® - The Deluxe Lost Stories Edition (1993)
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(Review originally published in The Washington Post TV Week, May 16-22, 1999)
One of the best baseball videos ever produced, "Mickey Mantle: The American Dream Comes to Life®," came out 10 years ago and was duly acclaimed.
A current look at this tape confirms that view. For an hour, Mantle tells stories of fact, feat and, most all, frolic that center around his 18 glorious years as a hero, slugger and "bad boy" of the New York Yankees.
Mantle sits in his trophy room at home and tells his stories, (neither interviewer Lew Early nor his questions are on the tape) in a plain ol' down-home drawl, often with the back-lot grammar he learned while growing up in Commerce, Okla. It's priceless Mantle, and often while he's telling his tales, pictures and classic black-and-white film clips illustrate the people or events involved.
During the 50th anniversary year of Mantle's rookie year (1951), producer-director Lew Rothgeb and Baseball Legend Video are doubling the pleasure of fans with another hour's worth of Mantle stories that didn't make it onto the original video. Called the "Lost Stories, " they had been stored in a vault, unseen publicly. Over the years, Early said he was often asked if he had more stories of the late outfielder. This is the answer. The new video, still titled "Mickey Mantle: The American Dream Comes to Life®," contains the original hour of stories as well as the additional hour. The price is $29.95, plus $4.95 shipping. (To order, call 1-800-843-6425.) There is additional Mantle information on the Web site, [...].
Recounting too many of the stories Mantle tells in his own fashion would spoil the video for the viewer. But among his recollections, Mantle talks of his dad's dream for his son and how his father and grandfather pitched to him daily to be sure he attained the goal of playing in the major leagues. He relates how he was signed by Yankees scout Tom Greenwade on a train heading to Washington for the season's opener. He also tells of his awe on his first visit to Yankee Stadium and how he could feel the "ghosts" of legends Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig.
On the fun side, he tells of Casey Stengel's tabbing him, Billy Martin and Whitey Ford as "Whiskey Slick," mentions "nosy poker," and talks about in-flight jokes and pranks reserved for rookies (and Joe Pepitone in particular).
And he dispels the belief that he and teammate Roger Maris did not get along. He calls Maris a great player, person and friend who was amazingly precise about every phase of the game, and adds that if any of the four Mantle sons were looking for a role model, he wishes they would choose Maris.
"The Lost Stories" are every bit as warm and charming as the original batch. For baseball fans, especially Mantle buffs, this profile leaves a legacy that's as big a boomer as one of The Mick's tape-measure home runs.

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Magnificent 7 (2005 Tour de France 12-Hour DVD; 6 pc.) Review

Magnificent 7 (2005 Tour de France 12-Hour DVD; 6 pc.)
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If you're a cycling fanatic, you're going to buy this set anyway, but the other reviewers are correct: there are definate issues with the DVD authoring and sound mixing used for this set. The video itself is the same you would have seen on OLN or virtually anywhere else. The video is clear, except when transmission is blocked due to mountainous terrain. That's the video issue mentioned by another issue. It's not that the DVD transfer is bad or anything - it's the same as what you saw on OLN - brief interruptions and assorted glitches.
The audio is another issue. The sound mixing is bad. I found that if I kept the volume at a medium level, it wasn't bad, but the background noise is often too loud to hear the commentary very well - you hear a lot of helicopter noise, crowd noise, etc. They may have been thinking it added to the realism, but they they are wrong - it's annoying. However, it's tolerable.
On one of the discs, the bonus features menu was screwed up. The menu said it was one thing, but it was actually a repeat of a bonus item off the previous disc. That's just bad QA.
Obviously they had to pick and choose which bits of the race to show, and I think in general they did a good job of it. The race always seems exciting, and you get to see most of the major tactical moves.
The bonus features are nice, generally two extra video segments per disc, and are the sort of "behind the scenes" stories you might have seen when the race was broadcast, but it's not OLN's videos, which might be a good thing if you already saw that on OLN's coverage when the race was actually happening.


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Running on the Sun (1999) Review

Running on the Sun (1999)
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A film by Mel Stuart
"Running on the Sun" is a documentary dealing with the Badwater 135 Ultra-marathon. While an ultra-marathon is defined as any race with a distance longer than a marathon (26.2 miles), Badwater is a grueling 135 mile race beginning in Death Valley (Badwater, California, elevation 282 feet below sea level) and ascending to 8000 feet by the race's end which includes an 18 mile stretch where the elevation rises over 5000 feet. With temperatures reaching 125 degrees in the middle of the day, the Badwater 135 is perhaps the nastiest race in the world. Only forty runners were invited to run Badwater in 1999.
This documentary focuses on a cross section of some of the competitors to give an accurate portrait of what Badwater is and what Badwater does to a person. From a Marine to a man with a prosthetic leg to a 68 year old man to the current record holder of Badwater to a woman from England who put herself into debt to make it to Badwater, "Running on the Sun" has an interesting cast of characters. But then anyone actually willing to attempt Badwater probably has to be an interesting person. So many of these runners are just ordinary people with an extraordinary drive, passion, and commitment. Very few runners are actually trying to win the race, or break a record, but rather they are seeking the incredible personal accomplishment of finishing (60 hours or less) and perhaps even chase the goal of finishing in under 48 hours and thus earning the symbol of pride: The Badwater Belt Buckle. Only those few who can finish in under 48 hours can earn that belt buckle (and they do "earn" it).
"Running on the Sun" touches upon why someone would run Badwater and what it takes. We see graphic footage of the feet of some of the runners and it isn't pretty. The film shows the joy, the pain, the pride, the disappointment, and the accomplishment of running Badwater. This really is an impressive documentary about an incredible endurance race. I'm impressed all the more because I'm currently training for my first marathon and while 26.2 miles seems like a long way, Badwater is 5 marathons back to back, plus a little bit more. Not to mention the whole Death Valley thing. It's beyond my comprehension as a runner.
There is something in "Running on the Sun" to recommend the movie to anyone. Runners will get to see something that is probably beyond their dreams or even desire, but they will surely appreciate the effort. Other endurance athlete can also appreciate what the competitors of Badwater are attempting. Those who are simply curious will see a film about perseverance and accomplishment through adversity. This is an inspiring and awe inspiring film, though I imagine many people won't get why someone would do this.
-Joe Sherry

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The Story of Fashion with Karl Lagerfeld - Rememberance of Things Past; Art & Sport of Fashion; Age of Dissent (2010) Review

The Story of Fashion with Karl Lagerfeld - Rememberance of Things Past; Art and Sport of Fashion; Age of Dissent (2010)
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Created in the 80's and once available on VHS this is literally a history of fashion in the 20th Century. Don't hope for Louis XVI forward - it begins with Worth. The historical footage is fantastic as it traces, not clothes hanging on manenquins as you'd see in a retro museum exhibition but fashion as worn by contemporary people with the right hair, makeup and accessories. A young-ish Karl Lagerfeld sketches the silhouettes throughout and explains the entire look and evolution of each style. He's good and pretty objective. The American version of this originally contained some obvious cuts to 80's TV programs (Dynasty) which may not have been part of the original or the DVD set. It ends, of course, at the time of it's creation, the 80's - so you won't get the style evolution to the present. I'm delighted this is now available on DVD. Take it for what it's worth - a rare look at the clothes - worn at the time they were comtemporary - by the people who worn them. Then go to the museum to see the workmanship in a static surround.

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