|

Ed Wood
Ed Wood has had a long,
strange trip to the digital promised land
of DVD. To begin the journey, we need to look at the early days of the DVD
revolution and a strange little offshoot known as DIVX. For those of you who
don't know what DIVX was, it was a format created by Circuit City that utilized
specially coded discs that only played for two days after first being run in
their DIVX-enabled DVD players. Since the price of these discs was set at
about $4, it was intended to be a replacement for video rentals. Customers who
wished to continue to watch the movie after the viewing period had ended could
"purchase" the movie by paying an additional $20 and unlocking the movie for
long-term play. The special nature of these discs not only allowed Circuit City
to control how long they could be watched, but on which machines, since it they
would only work indefinitely on the machines in which they were unlocked. It
also provided protection against copying (to this day, no one has broken the
DIVX format. Of course, who knows if anyone is trying?).
The practical upshot of this was that many studios that were skeptical about the
DVD format (strange to think of that attitude today) chose to release their
movies on DIVX. One of these studios was Disney. One of the films they
released was Ed Wood.
Well, the DIVX format inevitably failed (and as an added insult, had the hugely
popular video codec - mostly used for pirating films - named after it). This
left a library of films that had never been released on DVD, but had been
released on DIVX: the so-called "DIVX Exclusives". For a while it looked likely
that, due to its perceived failure (it bombed at the box office), Ed
Wood might remain on that list. The years rolled by and nary a word
was heard of a DVD release until 2002, when Disney announced the film would be
released in August of that year.
But August came and no movie. The release was cancelled in the U.S., but did
see release overseas. The price of imported discs skyrocketed while the film's
fans waited patiently for the film to be rescheduled domestically.
In late 2003, it was announced that the long delayed release of Ed
Wood had been set for February 2004, this time in a "Special Edition"
(although it seemed it would have essentially the same material as the original
version plus deleted scenes). But mere days before it was to go on sale, it was
pulled again. Many copies had already made it to shelves this time, so eBay had
another booming market in Ed Wood DVDs for a while. Eventually it
was properly released in November of 2004, finally letting anyone and everyone
have a look at what the fuss was about.
Essentially, I think the clamor for this DVD was an honest one, not just people
trying to get a rare item. Ed Wood is an exceptional film and the
chance to see it clean and crisp was certainly worth the wait. Unfortunately,
the extras fail to live up to the standard set by the film itself.
The commentary is the best part. It is one of those constructed ones, although
writer Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski do seem to be actually watching the
film. Director Tim Burton certainly knows what scenes he is commenting on, but
it's unclear if he watched the film or was just playing off specific scenes.
Actor Martin Landau is obviously not watching the film. This is made especially
clear when it becomes apparent that some of his comments are taken directly from
an interview featured in the DVD's extras. Still, all do make worthy comments
(especially the writers) so it's definitely worth at least one listen.
The mini-documentaries are fairly standard stuff. The only one that really
stands out is Making Bela, because it does give a nice look at how a deep
performance such as Landau's is augmented by make-up and how an actor goes about
re-creating a real person.
Most odd of all (and pretty useless) is a "music video", which consists of
footage from the film and video of Lisa Marie writhing around set to music from
the film. It's not made clear if this was actually made to air on MTV or
something, or if it was created for another purpose. Either way, it's pretty
strange.
Lastly, I should note that there is one extra, "When Carol Met Larry," that only
appears on the first batch of Ed Wood DVDs. It's a mini-doc about
a transvestite and it is rumored that it was this extra that held up the DVD for
all those years. True or not, I certainly hope that it wasn't for this
disposable piece of nonsense that I was kept waiting. The DVD certainly doesn't
miss its inclusion.
To sum up, the Ed Wood DVD is wonderful for one reason: the film.
They could have dropped all the extras and the film alone would carry this to a
perfect score. Maybe a "Collector's Edition" will surface one day that provides
extras worthy of the film they supplement.
Reviewed by Philip
R. Frey theLogBook.com Staff Writer



|