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Category:    Home > Reviews > Police Drama > TV > 21 Jump Street - The Complete First Season

21 Jump Street – The Complete First Season

 

Picture: C     Sound: C+     Extras: C+     Episodes: B-

 

 

The Fox Network, less-but-officially known as FBS, launched in the late 1980s looking for their first hit.  Before The Tracy Ullman Show, In Living Color, Werewolf and The X-Files, their first hit was 21 Jump Street.  Ratings were not high at the time for the network, but the show held in there for five seasons and is suddenly poised for a revival.  That is through a new film aimed at theaters, while Anchor Bay is releasing the entire series, beginning with this 4 DVD First Season set.

 

This begins with the original pilot, when Frederic Forrest originally led the would-be teen team of school infiltrators.  Soon, Steven Williams took over when Forrest had his feature film approach thrown off by TV’s weekly grind.  The lead was then-unknown Johnny Depp, a name that many even joked about, but will not admit to now.  The show would debut many now-known names and the cast fared better afterwards than anyone expected, especially form a time many wondered if Fox could survive.

 

Hanson (Depp) was joined by Hoffs (Holly Robinson, now Robinson-Peete), Penhal (Peter DeLuise), and Ioki (Dustin Nguyen).  No, I did not remember their names either, nor was I a fan of the show, but as it lasted, I kept checking in.  The show never changed much, and its idea of hip never clicked, but after al these years, it had to have aged oddly and I was right.  The episodes from this season are:

 

1)     Pilot (two-parts)

2)     America, What A Town

3)     Don’t Pet The Teacher

4)     My Future’s So Bright, I Gotta Wear Shades

5)     The Worst Night Of Your Life

6)     Gotta Finish The Riff (with alt. Audio Commentary by DeLuise)

7)     Bad Influence

8)     Blindsided

9)     Next Generation

10)  Low & Away

11)  16 Blown To 35

12)  Mean Streets & Pastel Houses

 

 

Robinson-Peete says the show does not hold up because of the 1980s hairdos, but I would go further and point out that it was the last in a long line of shows since the late 1960s that tried to be “kinder, gentler” about reality and how it was.  Naďve may be a way of describing it, but the idea of doing the show in Canada also never worked, as it never looked like it.  Later production from the north would, possibly due to this show, not making the mistakes this one did.  Also, the portrayals of African-American characters, especially when the criminals, is pre-Spike Lee and a bit embarrassing.  On the other hand, in more than an early sign of political correctness, Fox and Cannell did have positive such characters at a time when it was far less common.  Being this was weekly TV, the hook was whether the cops could keep their cover form being blown or not.  That is amusing, but it wears thin quickly, though the show did its best to bounce the idea everywhere it could.

 

The full frame 1.33 X 1 image is mixed, especially from show to show, with image trouble off of tape sources that particularly have noise and even bleeding color.  I give Cannell’s company credit for the shows being in as good a shape as they are in, but at the time the series appeared, TV was too quick to go to tape for editing and backup before it was proven.  Many telefilms have already been lost in their original form because the directors were forced (or badly agreed) to edit on old analog tape.  This show was lucky enough to be popular enough to survive that fate.  The old early TV stereo is available here in Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo when even Pro Logic surround was not common, and these shows have no surrounds to speak of.  The fidelity shows its age, but is mastered well enough here.  The theme, which Robinson-Peete sings and Depp & DeLuise yell “Jump” in the background over and over again is a camp classic of some sort.  Extras in addition to the commentary noted above on DVD 3 is a nice booklet with notes and color shots, plus interviews with Cannell, Robinson-Peete, Nguyen, and Williams.  This will be a boon to fans and a curio to others.  All in all, this set is not bad and the unintended laughs are enough to give it a good look.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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