|
Post by Mark on May 15, 2005 14:22:18 GMT -5
"Readin' and Writin'" (1932).
|
|
|
Post by Mark on May 14, 2005 16:08:13 GMT -5
Yes, there are legit VHS tapes of volumes 13-21 by Cabin Fever, but were never released to DVD. So the only way to get volumes 13-21 on DVD is to either buy the bootleg set or buy the VHS's and convert them to DVD if you have the software or DVD recorder. Otherwise, buy the bootleg set. There's only one bootleg set of 13-21 on DVD that I know of (meaning with the same artwork and/or put out by the same people), so I guess just get whatever you come across on eBay.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on May 12, 2005 0:25:33 GMT -5
I bought my copies of the Cabin Fever DVDs in the store (half of them from K-Mart and the other half, someone got for me from Tower Records). The slightly blurry appearance of the cover art is normal in this set. These were printed in Canada and they've been known in the past to print blurry covers for The Little Rascals Cabin Fever VHS's (the ones in EP mode). I'm sure your set is legit. BUT, stay away from any DVDs past volume 12! Those are definitely bootlegs as Cabin Fever/Hallmark never released anything beyond this 6-DVD set we have. The same people have also made the same 6-DVD set with a new cheap homemade cover art. Those are bootlegs too. There is no company logo on the covers. If you want volumes 13-21 on DVD badly enough, I'm sure the quality is fine if you buy them. But, still, they're bootleg.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on May 12, 2005 0:35:34 GMT -5
OPT is right. Sounds like another imposter.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Jun 5, 2005 21:35:44 GMT -5
Whoops. Sorry, my memory was off. I knew The Average Day had *some* episode in it that I don't have yet.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Jun 4, 2005 20:59:31 GMT -5
I think the last part of An Average Day is The Love Bug. Robin Cook said something about that.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Apr 21, 2005 7:47:27 GMT -5
There are LOTS of crossovers I can't name them all... There's Darla Hood playing the lead role in Laurel and Hardy's "The Bohemian Girl", we see Mickey Daniels in one of the Harold Lloyd silents "Dr. Jack", Darla was in "Neighborhood House" with Charley Chase... that's all I can think of. EDIT: I saw Alfalfa in "Life Hesitates at 40", another one of Chase's shorts. He must have loved the gang.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Jul 30, 2007 17:10:29 GMT -5
You know you're replying to really old threads, right?
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Apr 23, 2005 21:28:56 GMT -5
Gerald, right?
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Apr 17, 2005 4:42:43 GMT -5
I'm thinking it's "Slicker and the Gang"... I may be wrong. But I won't watch the episode and cheat. :-D
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Aug 30, 2005 9:00:48 GMT -5
What?
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Aug 28, 2005 9:14:41 GMT -5
The book isn't always as easy for an 11-15 year old to read because it was written for adults. It's intelligently written with quite a few big words.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Aug 27, 2005 21:34:40 GMT -5
Yeah I guess The Little Rascals are the #1 film series. Nothing else is ever so interesting. Except the Stooges, but they have sentimental value, I used to watch with my Dad. part of my complete childhood. But the rascals have WAAAYY better hairdos than Larry. That's exactly how I thought. A show lasting 22 years, what was going on behind the scenes and how they were made can really get you interested in the series. When I got the 1992 book for the first time for Christmas of 1995, I was OBSSESSED!..... which is ok for an 11 year old.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Aug 27, 2005 11:02:05 GMT -5
When I started watching Little Rascals when I was 11, I too wanted to be a film historian, but that changed as I got older.
|
|
|
Post by Mark on Apr 4, 2005 21:02:44 GMT -5
Yikes, no.
|
|