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The Odd Couple - The First Season

Average Customer Rating: 4.5
Release Date: 2007-04-24
Publisher:Paramount
Actors: Tony Randall; Jack Klugman; Pamelyn Ferdin; Lisa Gerritsen; Gloria McCartney
Aspect ratio:1.33:1
Audience rating:NR (Not Rated)
Format: NTSC; Color; Full Screen
Language:Original Language: English;
Weight:0.7 pounds

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Product description

 

Two divorced New Yorkers---a slob and a fussbudget---try to live together "without driving each other crazy" in this classic sitcom based on Neil Simon's hit play and movie. Both Jack Klugman and Tony Randall won Emmys in the leads, the latter in the final year of a five-season run. "Now if I only had a job," Randall said at the Emmy gala. The show inspired two remakes, one an animated series portraying the main characters as a cat and a dog, and a 1982-83 version with a mostly black cast.

Jack Klugman and Tony Randall give an advanced course in chemistry in the auspicious first season of The Odd Couple, which would only get better as the veteran character actors made themselves at home in their signature roles and the series switched from a laugh track to a live audience. In these first episodes, The Odd Couple hews pretty much to the voice and spirit of Neil Simon's play about mismatched roommates, sloppy sportswriter Oscar Madison and "miserable, picky, irritating" photographer Felix Unger ("That was the point," defends series executive producer and writer Garry Marshall, who provides lively audio introductions for each episode and commentary for the pilot). Playing pivotal roles this first season are Felix and Oscar's poker playing buddies, Murray the cop (Al Molinaro), Vinnie, Roy, and Speed, the fabulous Pigeon sisters (Monica Evans and Carole Shelley reprising their Broadway and film roles), and, of course, Neil Hefti's jaunty, jazzy theme, which was introduced in the 1968 film. As with M*A*S*H, the series would establish its own identity and supplant previous incarnations in the public's consciousness. The Odd Couple was never a ratings smash before it became a syndication staple.

The series' loyal following is amply rewarded with this five-disc set. In addition to all 24 first season episodes, a bonus disc contains four billed as "Tony and Jack's Favorite Episodes," including the one where Oscar attacks Felix in his sleep, and the duo are paired as contestants on the game show Password. In a clip from The Mike Douglas Show, Tony Randall promotes the series, and somehow ends up challenging Douglas and Pat Boone to a push-up contest (Boone wins!). A reunited Randall and Klugman, his voice a rasp following his throat cancer surgery, are seen in a priceless clip from a 1993 performance of The Odd Couple to benefit Randall's National Actor's Theatre. A gag reel is negligible, but Klugman contributes home videos of a book tour and he provides commentary for a clip of him winning his first Emmy Award ("I've never seen this," he says delightedly). The Odd Couple is the very model of a classic character-driven comedy. From its dream-team casting to the literate, witty writing, there is nothing odd about why this series' remains one of the most beloved in all TV Land. --Donald Liebenson

Beyond The Odd Couple


The Movie

More DVDs with Jack Klugman

More ‘70s TV Series

Stills from The Odd Couple: The First Season (click for larger image)







Customer reviews


« Wonderful but beware Season 1 »
Well written with superb performances from Jack K., Tony R. and most of the supporting cast. Sure, it's an old series made for a US audience but the 70's styles and occasional US-specific gag does not diminish the real enjoyment and delights of this comic masterpiece. However, beware Season 1. "The first season of the show was quite different from the ones that followed. It was filmed using only one camera, and used a laugh track instead of a studio audience. Many characters from the original play appeared in the show but, when the second season began, many were eliminated and the show filmed in front of a live studio audience with three cameras". Though the performances and writing in Season 1 are good, the absence of a live audience, the single camera and a laugh track do make the experience rather less joyous. Try starting with Season 2. By the time you have finished season 5, you may be so desperate to see more of Jack and Tony, that Season 1's 'shortcomings' become unimportant.
Rating: (3 out of 5) @ 2009-12-14
« Still one of the classic sitcoms »
4.5 stars for the first season, minus .5 for Garry Marshall's omnipresent ego on the dvds (...and plus 1.0 for the fact that I mistakenly pressed five and amazon doesn't have enough money for their software folks to let us change star ratings. Maybe after another 20 years?)

It was a real treat to find this dvd set at my local library. I don't watch much tv, don't have cable (my local library makes my mind much happier!), and haven't seen this show since the 70s. It stands up well; both Klugman and Randall are perfect in their roles, though after a while Jack seems to tone his character down and let Tony get all the laughs as he plays the straight man; this could have been the writers' doing, of course.

I really think Felix and Oscar are done as well by these two as in the movie by Lemmon and Matthau, and after a while it's not hard to come to love both of them. There's some sharp but unforced writing here, and a real bonus is the many establishing shots taken in NYC during 1970; it's a true time capsule to see the town back then. It seems so clean...even though it wasn't! (How could it be, with Oscar throwing a new cigar and hot dog wrapper in the street every episode?) I spent a lot of time there with my folks in that period, and the memories are wonderfully returned by the shots in Central Park, etc.

The one thing I don't love about this collection is producer Garry Marshall's tagging his name everywhere he can. I've seen a hundred-plus tv series on dvd but have never before seen one where every single episode features a (mostly very pointless) little spoken word intro by the producer...with his name plastered over the screen every single time!

What's the point? Ok, ok, you produced the show. We get it! Isn't seeing your name on both the opening and closing credits enough? Must it also be before every episode, along with your useless recital of the episode's title? After a while it gets quite annoying. You're only doing dirt to the show, Garry, and yourself. Before seeing this collection I'd think: Garry Marshall, wow, he did Happy Days and Laverne as well as this. Nice! Now I just think: Garry Marshall, another Hollywood putz.

But apart from Marshall's ego, this is a fine collection heightened by the inclusion of some of the later classic episodes on disc 5, including the Password gem, easily one of the series' best.

If you're a fan, this is certainly worth owning. Good old-fashioned wholesome humor, and 60s fashion to spare. A real trip back and a very pleasant one at that.



Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2009-06-16
« 5 Stars for the Show BUT 1 Star for the Lousy DVDS!! »
Paramount has completely destroyed this series. I was looking forward to sharing this series with my daughters but wind up trying to explain what was missing and why it might have been funny. This is nothing short of criminal and whoever did this at Paramount deserves to be fired. I have never NEVER seen anything like the utter disregard for anything in the arts. It's not just the music. There are definitely other cuts throughout the series. Like I'm pretty sure they cut the line from "I Gotta Be Me" in Season 3 where Oscar (in role reversal as felix) during the wine tasting tells the dinner guests to 'roll it around in your mouth until it tastes like shoe polish. 'What's next, Paramount? Going to strip the Nino Rota score from the Godfather?? You owe fans an apology and you also owe them new uncut DVDs that we paid good money for.
Rating: (1 out of 5) @ 2009-05-29
« Happy & Peppy »
I haven't laughed so much in a long time. This is a great collection of one of the best shows on TV. I already bought season 1&2 and will be buying 3&4 shortly.
Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2008-09-06
« Classic.... »
Peanut butter and jelly.....franks and beans...cookies and milk....you really can't beat any of these combos, but Felix and Oscar together are truly the best....A ton of laughs....can't wait to relive season 2.
Rating: (5 out of 5) @ 2008-07-25
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