Kojak: The Complete Movie Collection
DVD Wholesale Quick Overview:
Excellent acting and interesting stories. Telly Savalas always brings the whole of himself in everything in which he appears. I was raised in a small community in rural Southwest Virginia. Folks that lived there were named; Tuck, Carper, Linkous, and Carroll. The names used in the Kojak series were and are unfamiliar to me. Because of that difference, I had a very tough time keeping track of the characters in the story. One thing that I did enjoy immensely were the gritty scenes of the darker sections of New York City. It probably doesn’t many visitors yet, it is what make Kojak so real.
– Penelope Penworthy
I remember great movies made for TV from the Kojak series. The Belarus files was always one of my favorite movies, a lot like an early version of lets say Law and Order or other more recent deeper involved investigations. Interestingly though, I found the movies a bit slower than more of the modern shows, which do not waste much time. We liked seeing the Belarus file and that movie itself had a flavor of the movie great The Marathon Man. Kojak always had the ability to make a social comment or two, but his were more of that of conscience than anything that we see political today.
Hearkening back to the more campy type TV shows, Kojak was beyond that and it was a glimps of what was to come in the deeper investigation related programming that has become the standard of today. Get Kojak, well worth it.
– Joseph J. Slevin
Finally, “The Marcus-Nelson Murders” is on DVD. And just perfect as to the picture quality and sound quality. Brand-new looking for a 1973 movie, the master for this was great quality and maybe even further cleaned up. Watched it tonight upon receiving this pre-ordered item from Amazon.
A stunningly great movie as to the story, the Abby Mann script (1973 Emmy-winning), acting, etc. An infamous, sad, true story, based on NYC’s “Career Girl Murders.” Wonderful, not-found-anywhere-else, melancholy Andy Kim song used for the closing credits: “Don’t Give Me A Road I Can’t Walk.” It’s appropriately sad music and lyrics to close the show. The movie runs over 2:18.
“The Marcus-Nelson Murders” is the true story of a young, decent, poor, and mildly-mentally-challenged black man who was railroaded by the Manhattan police and D.A. for the 1963 murders of two white women in their 20s, and by the Brooklyn D.A. and police for the murder of a black woman and the attempted rape of a Puerto Rican woman, all separate incidents on different days. The young man told the police he didn’t do any of these crimes, but by the next day, he had confessed, in great detail, in over 60 typewritten pages. Because, in actuality, . . . the police had beat it out of him. There are more twists and turns which I’ll not mention here and which would ruin your viewing pleasure. (In real life, the young black man was named George Whitmore, Jr.) This story, as the movie notes, was one of the cases that formed the basis for the 1966 Supreme Court Miranda decision, requiring the police to read suspects their rights.
“The Belarus File”, on the same disc #1, looks to be a soft-focus film– literally it’s recorded on film, not video, but not the high-quality film stock of “The Marcus-Nelson Murders.” Didn’t watch “The Belarus File” through, and never saw it before.
I haven’t viewed the other discs yet, but this collection is worth it just for the magnificent copy of the now-released, great, “The Marcus-Nelson Murders” movie.
– Allen Jackson
DVD Wholesale Main Features :
Actors: Telly Savalas
Directors: Charles Barton
Format: Multiple Formats, Box set, Color, Full Screen, NTSC
Language: English
Region: Region 1 (U.S. and Canada only.)
Number of discs: 4
Rated: NR-Not Rated
Studio: Shout! Factory
DVD Release Date: January 24, 2012
Run Time: 720 minutes
ASIN: B005SQRYS2
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