Now available on DVD for the first time, Route 66 has been digitally transferred from the original masters. The television series, which aired 1960-64, is one of the most brilliant dramas to emerge from the '60s, famous fo... more »r its catchy Nelson Riddle theme song, intriguing characters, top-drawer writing and stellar guest appearances. The original "road trip" drama, this classic television series was one of the most highly rated of the era, establishing the Corvette as an American icon.« less
Belle K. (Belle) from SPRING GROVE, PA Reviewed on 1/2/2008...
If you love nostalgia, you'll love this series. The old cars are fabulous.
It was great seeing some very famous stars in their younger years, before they were so famous, including Lee Marvin, Jack Lord, Suzanne Pleshette, DeForest Kelly, Walter Mathau and others.
The bonus features include a classic corvette photo gallery that includes the specs, and some of the early 60's commercials from the original series.
1 of 1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Movie Reviews
Hitch a ride to Route 66
Breyel | MALAYSIA | 08/05/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Wow! Route 66 on DVD. Finally, we get to cruise America with Tod (Martin Milner) and Buzz (George Marahis).
What can I say to convince you it's a `60s B&W series worth watching? Well, the vette is one thing, but it never overshadows the stories. Despite all the adventure, travelogue, drama and poetry this duo gets into, the real subject of the series was the human condition. Tod and Buz acted as observers and mentors to broken-down prizefighters and rodeo clowns, sadists and iron-willed matrons, surfers and heiresses, runaway kids and people from all walks of life, forced by circumstances to confront their demons.
While we may only get Route 66 Season 1 in Volumes 1 and 2 as some reviewers have indicated, this is what we have to look forward to in the first year (October 1960 to June 1961):
Episode 1 -- "Black November" -- Car trouble strands Tod and Buz in a small town with a terrible secret.
Episode 2 -- "A Lance of Straw" -- Tod and Buz sign on to crew a shrimp boat, despite the objections of the female captain's boyfriend.
Episode 3 -- "The Swan Bed" -- Tod and Buz meet a girl in New Orleans during a parrot fever epidemic.
Episode 4 -- "The Man on the Monkey Board" -- Tod and Buz meet a Nazi-hunter and his quarry on an offshore oil rig.
Episode 5 -- "The Strengthening Angels" -- Tod and Buz try to help a migrant worker who is in trouble with the local sheriff.
Episode 6 -- "Ten Drops of Water" -- Devastated by drought, three orphaned ranchers need Tod, Buz and the Corvette.
Episode 7 -- "Three Sides" (aka Three Sides of a Coin) -- Tod and Buz get involved in family strife while working for an Oregon hop farmer.
Episode 8 -- "Legacy for Lucia" -- While working at a logging camp, Tod and Buz meet a girl from Italy, who insists she has inherited the state of Oregon from a local man.
Episode 9 -- "Layout at Glen Canyon" -- Tod and Buz act as bodyguards to fashion models at the Glen Canyon Dam construction site.
Episode 10 -- "The Beryllium Eater" -- Tod and Buz help an old prospector stake his claim after he finds beryllium ore.
Episode 11 -- "A Fury Slinging Flame" -- Tod and Buz meet a scientist (Leslie Nielsen) who intends to hide in Carlsbad Caverns with friends until an expected nuclear holocaust is over.
Episode 12 -- "Sheba" -- Tod and Buz work as cowboys for Woody Biggs (Lee Marvin), who isn't done with the woman he sent to prison.
Episode 13 -- "The Quick and the Dead" -- Tod becomes a race car driver as he and Buz get involved in a family controversy over whether an aging driver should retire.
Episode 14 -- "Play It Glissando" --Tod and Buz try to protect a woman from her jazz musician husband.
Episode 15 -- "The Clover Throne" -- Tod and Buz work for a date farmer (Jack Warden) who fights the highway department while he "waits out" his sexy ward, hoping she will marry him.
Episode 16 --"Fly Away Home (Part 1)" -- Tod becomes a crop duster for a struggling company.
Episode 17 -- "Fly Away Home (Part 2)" -- Tod and Buz get involved in a quandary over an extra-dangerous crop dusting contract.
Episode 18 -- "Sleep on Four Pillows" -- Tod and Buz meet a teenage girl who claims to be on the run from gangsters - but her family thinks she has been kidnapped.
Episode 19 -- "An Absence of Tears" -- Tod and Buz try to protect a blind widow from her husband's murderers.
Episode 20 -- "Like a Motherless Child" -- Buz and Tod split up over whether to return a runaway boy to an orphanage.
Episode 21 -- "Effigy in Snow" -- Tod and Buz try to stop a murderer who has left his latest victim in the snow at Squaw Valley.
Episode 22 -- "Eleven, the Hard Way" -- Tod and Buz meet a gambler (Walter Matthau), whom the people of Broken Knee have asked to save their town.
Episode 23 -- "Most Vanquished, Most Victorious" -- At the request of his aunt, Tod traces the life of his saintly cousin through the Los Angeles slums.
Episode 24 -- "Don't Count Stars" -- Tod and Buz get involved in a custody case over a 9-year-old heiress and her drunken, gambling "uncle."
Episode 25 -- "The Newborn" -- Tod and Buz protect a Native American girl and her newborn from their employer, who rules the land like a feudal baron.
Episode 26 -- "A Skill for Hunting" -- Tod and Buz are framed as poachers after Tod interferes with a real poacher's hunting.
Episode 27 -- "Trap at Cordova" -- Tod and Buz are coerced into teaching school children in rural New Mexico.
Episode 28 -- "The Opponent" -- Buz visits and inspires his boyhood hero, a former boxing great (Darren McGavin) who is now on the skids.
Episode 29 -- "Welcome to Amity" -- Tod and Buz meet a woman (Susan Oliver), who wants to bury her mother in a nearby cemetery. The people of Amity want to stop her.
Episode 30 - "Incident on a Bridge" --Tod and Buz board in a home with an abused, mute girl and her two jealous - and violent - suitors.
So, c'mon. Hitch a ride and relive these nostalgic vignettes of America and Americans. It's a great trip!
POST-SCRIPT (31 Oct. 2007):
I concur with subsequent reviewers, regarding the audio-video transfer quality to this DVD set. It could be better. Although the video is too dark, the brightness and contrast can be adjusted from your system. Audio varies from episode to episode, and I would have thought with today's technology this could have been improved. It is a pity because the packaging of this boxed set is well done. The menu of episodes, commercials and bio-film background are nice touches to a great, great series. Does this mean I regret buying this DVD set? Not one iota, considering its the best thing out there at the moment."
This Show Is Where It's at Cats!
Chris Damon | New Jersey | 07/20/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"UPDATE: The quality on some of the episodes lacks the quality of Season 1 Part 2 which is excellent except for the widescreen formatting they used. You can tell when they used original films versus washed out and barely audible video tapes in Season 1 Vol 1. Just keep that in mind. At least it is in 4:3 format.
Finally someone is listening! First the Fugitive and now Route 66! Television with meaning. I guess it was well worth the wait for the studios to get all the crap out of their system so they could start releasing the real quintessential jewels of American television.
This show was so innovative for its time - It was shot on location around the country. The entire cast and crew literally travelled from one spot to the next and filmed each episode. This would be so cost prohibitive today, and a show like this would probably be cancelled after one episode anyway with today's TV execs - especially that one at the CW!
Anyway, this is a legitimate, proper Season release (granted it is in two parts) of my all time absolute favorite television show ever!
It is released by the same people who did the 11 episodes disc, which had great video quality, kept all of the bumpers, commercials and previews for the next week intact. You couldn't ask for more. If they release all seasons of this great series, I swear I will never watch current television again. THIS SHOW IS WHERE IT'S AT CATS!"
On the 'Route' again
A. W. Carter | Orlando, FL | 07/19/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This is one of the best-written anthology shows ever to appear on television (thank you, Stirling Silliphant). Let's hope Roxbury responds to the fan's reaction of this set and does the presentation right by better remastering future volumes and adding interviews with Martin Milner (Tod) and George Maharis (Buz), both still alive and kicking.
Buz and Tod tooled around in a (60'-64') Corvette leading us into the lives of locals all over the country. The show was actually shot on location on the road, as opposed to Fox TV's recent road series disaster, "Drive" (shot on one bad patch of road in So. Cal. subbing for Florida and Georgia!) Episodes focused on boozy broads married to domineering husbands, tormented artists (Jack Lord channeling Chet Baker), and kooky kittens (purr, Julie Newmar, purr).
I ran into George Maharis at a restaurant in Santa Monica a while back when Nick At Night was replaying the series, and just had to go over and congratulate him on the show. He beamed like a proud peacock, wearing a blue blazer, neck scarf, and a wig that still matched his Buz-do. I said, "You must have been on top of the world at 25 in your own series having adventures all over America." He was, and he had some great stories to tell behind the scenes.
Let's hope some of them end up on a future volume of this series on DVD.
Hollywoodaholic: Confessions of a Screenwriter
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Get Your Kicks On...
Caesar M. Warrington | Lansdowne, PA United States | 03/15/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Sorry friends and readers, I know it's a bit shopworn but I couldn't resist the title. I assure you, however, that this TV series remains far from stale.
Inspired by the wanderlust of Kerouac and mainstream America's discovery of the beat subculture, ROUTE 66 ran from 1960 to 1964 and was television's first road trip drama. Similar to David Janssen's THE FUGITIVE, each episode would have the all-American Tod Stiles (Martin Milner) and his hipster companion Buz Murdock (George Maharis; replaced in mid-1963 by Glenn Corbett as the haunted army vet Lincoln Case) traveling Route 66 in their blue Corvette, getting involved with the lives and problems of the people they'd encounter on the road.
Although some of today's viewers might find Buz's "hip lingo" to be over-the-top, one should understand that he is a beatnik and he talks like a beatnik. Throughout ROUTE 66's four year run, Stirling Silliphant (VILLAGE Of The DAMNED, IN The HEAT Of The NIGHT, TOWERING INFERNO, POSEIDON ADVENTURE, DIRTY HARRY) was the main scriptwriter, earning the series its well-deserved reputation for quality writing. Nelson Riddle did the show's opening theme, which became a Top 30 hit.
Included in this 4-disc collection is the first half of the first season, containing 15 episodes (guest starring Walter Matthau, Darren McGavin, Lee Marvin, Leslie Nielsen and Jack Warden, among others), along with extras featuring original commercials and the featurette "History of the Corvette." The rest of the first season can be found on the recently released Season 1: Volume 2.
"
A Detour Off The Mother Road
Robert Huggins | Suburban Philadelphia, PA United States | 10/25/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"The euphoria of the early five star pre-release customer reviews now has to be tempered with the reality of this new release from Roxbury Entertainment (owner of the series) and Infinity Entertainment (the DVD releasing company). Unfortunately, the audio/visual quality of this release is simply not up to the standards set by some of the major studios for classic/vintage TV-on-DVD releases. While there are, indeed, some very good looking episodes in this release of the series' first 15 episodes, the reality is that a number of the episodes are of lesser visual quality. They're not horrible looking, mind you, but they're certainly not as good as one would expect for one of the key television series of the 1960s. One of the episodes, "A Fury Slinging Flame," is clearly an edited, syndication episode timing in at just over 46 minutes, though all of the other episodes average around 51 minutes. "Route 66" was produced around the same time as "Naked City" by the same producer, Herbert B. Leonard, and the episodes from that series that have been released to date by Image Entertainment look significantly better than what has been released in this collection. One wonders what this release could have been had it been in the hands of an Image Entertainment or CBS/Paramount, which has released brilliant looking vintage TV series on DVD such as "The Fugitive" and "The Untouchables," among several others.
The DVD's producers have included some original, vintage commercials which, like the "Naked City" DVD releases, are included as an extra feature and are not integrated into the individual shows. There are also cast bios (including short clips from the episodes), as well as a photo gallery and historic information about the Chevrolet Corvette's early years. But one wishes that the series' leads, George Maharis and Martin Milner (both, thankfully, still with us but getting on in years), had either been interviewed for this set or even provided some episode commentary.
The brilliance of this series is the sum total of its parts, starting with superior writing, the superb casting of both leads and weekly guest stars, and the on-location filming across America, circa early 1960s. Simply put, "Route 66" ranks among the very best television dramas of all time. That it has not received better treatment on DVD befitting its pedigree is a shame.
Despite the flaws in its presentation, this release is essential for all fans of the series and those who appreciate a classic, quality dramatic television series. Let's hope that Roxbury/Infinity can make significant improvements on subsequent releases of the series. "Route 66," the series, easily earns five stars, but this DVD set loses a star for a somewhat less than desirable audio/visual presentation.