This set contains the entire first season of Jeeves and Wooster. In "Jeeves Takes Charge" young man-about-town Bertie Wooster employs a new valet called Jeeves, and not a moment too soon. Thanks to his Aunt Agatha, Bertie faces the terrible prospect of marriage to the statuesque Honoria Glossop, and only Jeeves can save the day. "Tuppy and the Terrier" finds Bertie in trouble again when he loses Aunt Agatha's dog. Further aunt-related complications arise when Bertie's chum Tuppy falls for our hero's cousin Angela. Aunt Dahlia is not amused. An uncle in love with a waitress, a trip to the country, a speedy choirboy, and a secret betting syndicate all lead to trouble in "The Purity of the Turf". Jeeves, of course, is the only one who can put things right. Jeeves and Wooster really hits its stride in the final episodes of Series 1: "The Hunger Strike" and "Brinkley Manor". When Bertie visits Aunt Dahlia he is called upon to solve the romantic problems of his friends Tuppy Glossop (in love with Cousin Angela) and the delightful Gussy Fink-Nottle (in love with Madeleine Basset, a young lady who believes the stars to be God's daisy-chain.) Unwisely, Bertie decides to cook up his own plan and before long disaster strikes. Aunt Dahlia's superb chef Anatole gives his notice, and Bertram is to blame. Thank goodness for Jeeves. --Simon Leake, Amazon.com
RRP: £24.99
Our Price: £49.99 (subject to change)
Editorial
Amazon.co.uk Review
PG Wodehouse's much-loved stories about Bertie Wooster and his brilliantly clever valet Jeeves were brought faithfully to life in Jeeves and Wooster, starring Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry as master and servant. Perfectly cast and with scripts that retain all the sparkling wit of Wodehouse's prose, it's hard to see how any future adaptation of his work could surpass this wonderfully funny series.
What's the point?
Review date: 2005-07-22 Rating: 2 out of 10
I allready had season1 on video - when I bought it on DVD I expected the picture-quality to be much better. But it's exactly the same! So what's the point?
However, the discs appear to have been mastered from video tape several generations distant from the 16mm film original. There is very little detail visible, the contrast range severely limited, bright areas of the picture are totally washed out, and darker areas swimming with grain.
In addition, the upper third of the image expands and contracts noticably throughout both discs.
Granada video have really fallen down with this one, the discs need to be re-mastered, and re-released in proper DVD quality...
The audio commentary provided as an extra, sounds like someone attempting to be incredibly boring, and succeeding!
However, there is a serious problem with this transfer to DVD. Frankly, the quality of the transfer stinks.
This two disk, single sided presentation contains just one extra, a rather lame monotonic "audio commentary". Of course it also has the obligatory "scene index".
No, the problem here lies entirely with the picture transfer to DVD. It is extremely grainy, the colours are washed out, and there is a distinct lack of detail.
These programmes deserve better treatment than this, and I truly hoped that the remaining 3 series get it.