|

|
|
|
Birds
of Prey
Too
comic booky for the masses, or even the WB subset thereof, the short-lived
Birds of Prey TV series, about female crime fighters in 'New
Gotham City,' has finally been delivered to the medium where it can
be the most appreciated, as Warner Home Video has released Birds
of Prey The Complete Series, a four platter set featuring all thirteen
40-minute episodes originally broadcast in 2002 and 2003. The finale
is a makeshift double episode, but it forms an excellent resolution
to the program, so that while the show's discontinuation is truly lamentable,
the DVD serves as a coherent and resolute miniseries. Additionally,
the superficiality of the character relations gives way to deeper emotional
conflicts and rewards across the length of the work. Dina Meyer plays
the former Batgirl, now relegated to a high-tech wheel chair and directing
the operations from a penthouse lair. Ashley Scott is the daughter
of the late Catwoman and the absent Batman, generally following the
guide of Meyer's character but with a distinctive independent streak
and no costume or mask-she just assumes that the city is so big, no
one is going to recognize her. Rachel Skarsten is a younger runaway
with psychic powers who joins up with the others in the first episode,
as her origins are revealed later on. Delivering the most delicious
performance in a show filled with delicious performances, Mira Sara
portrays the shrink of Scott's character and, unbeknownst to the
heroine, the former main squeeze of the permanently absent Joker.
The show's immediate
appeal is of course in the depiction of the stylish actresses in hot
getups, kicking butt and otherwise fulfilling the many dark, naughty
boy fantasies fans of such programs inevitably harbor. Most of the episodes
feature a visiting villain with a special power or quirk, and it is
the repetition of this dynamic at first that emphasizes the show's comic
book roots and supposed limitations. It may be sophisticated camp, but
it is still camp. As the show progresses, however, the relationships
between the heroines, and a couple of their boyfriends, continue to
develop, as do the moral explorations of vigilantism and that sort of
thing, so that while the show's basic, visceral thrills advance unabated,
its emotional foundations become stronger and more compelling with each
installment. It is a fantastic mix, and it is only a shame that viewers
didn't give the show more of a chance in its day.
The picture is presented
in letterboxed format only, with an aspect ratio of about 1.78:1, but
Warner pulls one of its occasionally shortsighted blunders and does
not provide 16:9 enhancement, as sorely as the show could use it (Warner
also should have released the DVD immediately after the show was cancelled,
as there may still have been a faint chance of kickstarting a revival
at the time, such as what happened with Fox's better marketed Firefly).
Otherwise, the picture looks slick and glossy. Warner also leaves the
sound in standard stereo rather than splurging for 5.1 Dolby, although
again, the show could have really benefited from the upgrade. There
are a lot of front channel separations, but no significant rear-channel
activity (in one episode, the voice of a 'chameleon' bad guy ought to
be bouncing all over the place, but instead it just jumps from right
to left and back again). Some of the music has also been changed from
the original broadcast. There are optional English subtitles.
The fourth platter
contains the show's first stab at the pilot episode, with Sherilyn
Fenn making a less effective presence in Sara's role. That is the
major difference between the two, although there are other, minor alterations.
Adding insult to injury, this is the one episode that does have 16:9
enhancement. It can be enjoyable, however, to revisit the pilot-either
this one or the one on the first platter-after watching the whole series,
because the characters carry a greater resonance and also because, in
a nice touch of symmetry, both the first and the final episodes involve
hypnotism.
The collection's
one other special feature is inspired. There are three 'seasons' of
brief, animated episodes originally broadcast on the Internet of a program
entitled Gotham Girls, with one season on each of the first three
platters. Set before the time of Birds of Prey, the cartoons
feature various combinations of Batgirl, Cat Woman, Poison Ivy and Harley
Quinn interacting with each other and getting into mischief. Each cartoon
in the first two seasons is basically a blackout sketch, and the best
ones are the ones that build to a single punchline. The third season
then advances to one cliffhanger-generated narrative, in which someone
makes all of the men in Gotham disappear. The first season on the first
platter has ten episodes (one is a two-parter) and runs 27 minutes.
The second season has ten episodes and runs 35 minutes. The third season
has ten installments and runs 36 minutes.
September 11,
2008
DVD
Roundup: This Week's DVD Releases
The
Review Vault
- by
Douglas Pratt
Douglas Pratt's DVD-Laser Disc Newsletter
is published monthly.
For a free sample, call (516)594-9304 or go to his
website at www.DVDLaser.com