Mama’s Family: The Complete First Season, The Complete Second Season (DVD)

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When I was a wee lad, local television stations often played classic television programming that was more than two year old. Often times they ranged from being well in to the mid-seventies. Often times as a child whenever I found myself awake in the middle of the night, I’d often sneak in a few minutes or so of “Mama’s Family.” It was a long running and very well loved syndicated program for years, before networks phased out classic TV.

It was usually sandwiched between “Hee Haw” and “MASH,” and it was usually a fun half hour. Nowadays it’s a nice kitschy series that spun off from the popular skit from “The Carol Burnett Show.” Cast member Vicki Lawrence took her character of Mama once the series ended and gave audiences the Southern fried family sitcom that served as a relative precursor to the Madea movies.
Much like Madea, Mama was tough, rough around the edges, but had a really good heart, that often benefitted her odd family in the end. The series thankfully hasn’t aged much at all, if you watch it in the context of the Southern-centric seventies. Though Lawrence often played the matriarch and straight woman to the characters, she was often hilarious in her own ways, displaying her own form of Christian discipline that involved love and caring.

Among the cast members were Rue McClanahan, and her son Vint and eventual daughter in law, Naomi. “Mama’s Family” has genuine heart and old fashioned sitcom tropes for folks who love the staged open room environment of the bygone shows. Lawrence is hilarious as Mama, and is a woman much in the vein of Archie Bunker who is set in he ways, but learns to change with the times as her family grows over the course of the series. It may not appeal to everyone, but for my money “Mama’s Family” is a gem of a seventies sitcom worthy of an audience.

For folks expecting the royal treatments for “Mama’s Family,” you’ll find yourself very much out of luck. Though Time Life is often very generous about their releases, both season sets feature nothing but the edited syndicated cuts of the episodes. Fans who want the uncut and bold humor from the original series will likely have to wait longer until another studio offers up their edition of “Mama’s Family,” as fans had to do with “Roseanne” after Anchor Bay royally fouled up their release of the series.

To make things even worse, the DVD sets offer no special features or uncut scenes for the fans, not even as extras. The original theme song is missing in favor of a truncated version, while the Harvey Korman introductions have been edited out in favor of time. There are also no bloopers, no acknowledgement of the Carol Burnett Show, and none of the usual bells and whistles that should come with a spin off from a Grade A comedy series like “The Carol Burnett Show.”

The Season Two DVD atones for the mistakes made by the first release, with some interesting extras. There’s the original TV movie entitled “Eunice” focusing on Mama’s daughter as played by Carol Burnett. There’s the featurette “Mama’s Family Tree: The Roots” about Mama and her daughter Fran, as well as interviews with Mama conducted by Vicki Lawrence, along with Lawrence interviewing Carol Burnett, and Betty White.

For folks who want to spend some time with Mama and her eccentric Southern family, Season One and Season Two are now available for purchase.

The Dean Martin Celebrity Roasts – Collectors Edition (DVD)

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Before pseudo-celebrities and tabloid bait became the new trend for the Friar’s roasts, Dean Martin was a bonafide MC who roasted some of his favorite celebrity friends, and iconic actors with much hilarity. From 1973 to 1984, the celebrity roasts were priceless, and Dean Martin never failed to deliver with laughs, antics, and some of the most famous celebrities hob knobbing and riffing on one another. The 6 DVD Set from Time Life features a dozen celebrity roasts, along with some extra footage for fans looking for more laughs for people actually worthy of roasting.

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Taboo Tales – 12 Movie Collection (DVD)

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With the advent of indie film making and easy accessibility of technology, I’m surprised there isn’t a surge of exploitation films warning of the dangers of abortion and teen pregnancy. Back in the thirties and forties where America was paralyzed by the fear of youth culture destroying society with weed and abortion, exploitation PSA’s were all the rage. Mill Creek Entertainment offers up twelve of the best of the worst shock exploitation films about teens led astray by crime and drugs from their devotion to common American practices of the time like Christianity, Education, and making sure the black people didn’t use the same toilets white folks did.

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The Dungeonmaster (1985)

30ab0c4716a468f9af4370f442f11a06I knew it! All the time, I knew it! If Satan had to exist, he was Richard Moll the whole time. No one would ever suspect the guy from “Night Court.” Satan–correction: Mestema, is smart enough to build a world and challenge a computer whiz, but isn’t smart enough to understand the “magic machines” known as computers (such foreign tongue!). So in response, he challenges a dorky computer nerd whose over reliance on a female computer borders on creepy, to a series of trials. If the computer nerd wins the matches, I’m assuming he keeps his soul. If he loses just one trial, Satan is allowed to consume him and his aerobics instructor girlfriend Gwen. Paul the computer nerd is given a costume even Reb Brown would laugh at, and with his arm band, is allowed to fight and figures out how to control the computer hell dimension place. Whatever the hell that is.

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National Lampoon’s Animal House (1978)

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Before the millions of utterly atrocious rip-offs, there was the first, there was the only, there was the grand daddy of college campus comedies, there was “Animal House” Set in 1962, John Landis’ comedy masterpiece tells the tale of two new college recruits attempting to pledge to an elite fraternity. They’re basically cast aside from the elitist frat house, so they must now pledge to the worst frat on college, the Delta House to which they’re instantly accepted amidst the dysfunctional and odd array of members. But when they cause a ruckus and fail to live up the school’s academic standards, the dictatorial Dean Wormer decides to close down the house once and for all.

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Bloody Homecoming (2012) (DVD)

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Yet another iteration of “Slaughter High,” director Brian C. Weed’s revenge horror film attempts to be a sanctimonious message about bullying all the while lulling its audience to sleep with an illogical and goofy film about revenge and the past coming back to haunt some classmates. My only fear is the memory of this movie coming back to haunt my nightmares.

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Fangasm

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If people got their panties in a bind over “Big Bang Theory,” try watching the Syfy show “Fangasm.” It’s staged, well edited, and saccharine. And yet, I may keep watching anyway. But then I’m a sadist. You can really see where most of the show is set up and conveniently edited, and you really don’t have to look all that carefully. The premise is seven geeks working for Stan Lee for his Comikaze convention. Lee doesn’t even show up to greet his interns, really, but hey George Takei does. So that’s something (?). How convenient that two of the interns are humongous trekkies, right?

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