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Walt Disney Treasures: Zorro - The Complete First Season

Walt Disney Treasures: Zorro - The Complete First SeasonActors: Guy Williams, Henry Calvin, Gene Sheldon, George J. Lewis, Don Diamond
Studio: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment

List Price: $59.99
Buy New: $44.75
as of 11/25/2009 05:47 CST details
You Save: $15.24 (25%)



New (9) Used (3) Collectible (1) from $42.85

Seller: lytebryte
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 24 reviews
Sales Rank: 693

Format: Black & White, Full Screen, NTSC, Restored
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Region: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Number Of Discs: 6
Running Time: 945 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.9 x 1.2

MPN: DISD101865D
UPC: 786936791877
EAN: 0786936791877
ASIN: B0029R81BC

Release Date: November 3, 2009  (New: Last 30 Days)
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Buena Vista Home Video Release Date: 11/03/2009 Run time: 945 minutes

Amazon.com
Like Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier, Disney's Zorro transcends nostalgia. From the thrilling theme song ("Out of the night / When the full moon is bright / Rides the horseman known as Zorro….") to the lively sword fights and swashbuckling derring-do, this rousing 1957 series has lost none of its entertainment value for old or young. The 39-episode first season, presented in glorious black and white and complete with "be with us next week" teasers, unfolds in three story arcs. The first, Zorro's origin story, is best. The setting is Spanish California in 1820. Don Diego de la Vega (Guy Williams, like Fess Parker, an unknown actor catapulted to icon status) has been urgently summoned from Spain by his father to return home to Pueblo de Los Angeles, where the tyrannical Capitan Monastario has unleashed a reign of terror and injustice. Diego, a man of action, passes himself off as a bookish man of letters and by night dons a cape and mask to become the outlaw Zorro ("the fox"), champion of the oppressed. The other two story arcs concern a conspiracy to rule Southern California led by the shadowy Eagle.

Zorro was Walt Disney's first prime-time half-hour series and it benefits greatly from Disney's keen eye for casting, storytelling genius, and high production values. The cast includes Henry Calvin as the bumbling and rotund Sergeant Garcia and Gene Sheldon as Diego's trusty, mute right-hand man Bernardo (the two actors were later paired as the Laurel & Hardy-esque characters in Disney's Babes in Toyland). Zorro deftly blends action and comedy in its first season, with no mushy romance to slow things down. The dialogue is at once kid-friendly (younger viewers may appreciate it when in one episode Sergeant Garcia reads a Wanted poster aloud), but not condescending. Diego/Zorro possesses a rapier-like wit with which he handily disarms his foes.

This collectible Walt Disney Treasures set contains rarely seen archival goodies and rarities, including a clip from a 1957 anniversary episode of the Disneyland TV series in which Walt regales the Mouseketeers with a preview of Zorro. There is a featurette about the Zorro legend and the enduring character's various incarnations on the page and screen, and a new-to-home video 1960 two-hour two-parter that features Rita Moreno and Gilbert "The Cisco Kid" Roland as a dashing bandit leader. Fans eager to savor "new dangers and new thrills in the adventurous life of Zorro" should proceed directly to The Complete Second Season. --Donald Liebenson


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 24



5 out of 5 stars First class Disney and TV entertainment!   November 20, 2009
I grew up knowing Walt Disney's Zorro TV show more from the famous theme song than the show itself. There were reruns in syndication and a revival on The Disney Channel (with special emphasis on the Zorro episodes featuring Annette) but I don't think I saw more than a handful, I must admit. I missed the show at the peak of its initial success in the late '50s.

That's why I wanted to experience every episode from both seasons on the new Walt Disney Treasures releases. I must say, after 78 shows and four extra Walt Disney Presents hours, it is an extremely rich and entertaining television, far and above most similar programs of its era. And while there are the issues of political incorrectness (ethnicity, roles of women, drink and smoking), there's an amazing relevance to the overall series and perhaps a social influence beyond that.

Zorro rarely opposes standard robbers and bandits. His main adversaries are authority figures who have exploited their positions for wealth and power. They use people like playthings and often have mental problems (after all, The Caine Mutiny was popular around this time).

Because the episodes, while somewhat self contained, are almost always multi-part "arcs," much like today's episodic TV shows, these villains are permitted to oppress and pillage until they sink under their own weight. Zorro sees to it that their plans fail and eventually that they are put either in jail or outside any real influence.

Among the most interesting of these antagonists are, of course, Monastario (Britt Lomond), who sets the standard for the "executive" villain, but perhaps it is Jose Sebastian Varga, who has a secret identity as Zorro does -- 'The Eagle" -- that is among the most memorable. Played by Charles Korvin (whom fans of The Honeymooners will recognize as Carlos Sanchez, who taught Ralph, Alice and Mrs. Manicotti how to mambo), Varga is a complicated man, with sharp mood swings (punctuated by a voice that becomes shrill) and a paranoid fear of being alone. Don Diego (Guy Williams in his Clark Kent identity when he's not Zorro) and his servant, Bernardo (Gene Sheldon) actually subject Varga to a "Gaslight" type scare fest.

Speaking of Bernardo, his role as "servant" is so much more, of course. As played brilliantly by Gene Sheldon, he is a mute who also feigns hearing impairment in order to listen in to conversations. By today's standards, Bernardo would perform the same role but perhaps be called a "personal assistant."

Sgt. Garcia, a role defined by the versatile Henry Calvin (who co-starred in Broadway's Kismet and did a brilliant Oliver Hardy to Rob Petrie's Stan Laurel on a great Dick Van Dyke Show episode) is classic middle management. He's always eager to please his boss du jour, hoping that each successive replacement might not be as corrupt as the last, and also yearning for a promotion that never comes. Don Diamond joins the cast a few episodes into the show as Garcia's sidekick, a role he repeated in a manner of speaking on The Flying Nun, when he partnered with Vito Scotti as the Clouseau-like Captain Fomento.

Scotti is among the legion of guest stars that appear on the series and the four hour shows. In The Complete Season One set, look for Vinton Hayworth (General Schaefer on I Dream of Jeannie); Joan Shaklee (Buddy's wife Pickles on The Dick Van Dyke Show); Anthony George (Burke Devlin on Dark Shadows), and the beloved Mary Wickes (of countless shows from I Love Lucy and Dennis the Menace to Sigmund and the Sea Monsters and the Mickey Mouse Club's Annette serial).

Annette plays two roles in The Complete Season Two package: a young daughter in search of her father (the role Walt famously gave to her as a sweet 16 gift since Guy Williams was her teen idol), singing Jimmie Dodd's "Lonely Guitar," and as a feisty young woman with bad taste in boyfriends, singing Richard & Robert Sherman's "Amo Que Paso" and "Como Esta Usted."

Music features prominently in many Zorro episodes, from original songs created primarily for the operatic Calvin or Bill Lee (who sings offscreen for Williams and also guest star Cesar Romero) to William Lava's score, which weaves themes for Zorro, Bernardo and Garcia (the last of which reminds me a bit of the Nutcracker March).
Season two features more guests stars then season one, since the series was a huge hit by then. They include spaghetti western stalwart Lee Van Cleef, as well as Michael Forest and Barbara Luna (both seen on the classic Star Trek series); Richard Anderson (Six Million Dollar Man & Bionic Woman); Whit Bissell (The Time Tunnel); Tige Andrews (The Mod Squad), Neil Hamilton (Batman), Robert Vaughn (The Man from UNCLE); George Neise (Leo Fassbinder on The Dick Van Dyke Show) and none other than Lost in Space's Dr. Smith himself, Jonathan Harris!

The hour long shows all feature celebrity guests. In addition to Annette, there's Rita Moreno (the same year as West Side Story), Ross Martin (The Wild, Wild West) and Ricardo Montalban (Fantasy Island). Walt Disney introduces each of the hours.

It's interesting to speculate that Zorro, which was a huge hit in 1957, depicting a renegade romantic hero who flew in the face of errant authority, might have inspired the youth of the day to revolt ten years later when it seemed to happen in real life with Vietnam and Watergate. And today, those baddies can be compared with maniacal corporate cads like Bernie Madoff and Leona Helmsley.

It's a mistake to consider Walt Disney's Zorro as a footnote in television history or in Disney history. As the bonus features prove, the series was produced at a budget unheard of at the time and has a movie quality. The character never seems to go out of style -- just ask Antonio Banderas, who portrayed the hero in two recent films. But surely even he would acknowledge that Guy Williams in many ways made Zorro his own and may always be fondly remembered for the role.



5 out of 5 stars Great Addition to The Walt Disney Treasure Collection   November 19, 2009
Ryan McCabe
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I have been collecting the Walt Disney Treasures for years and it is only fitting a classic Walt Disney show like this be added into the collection. I look forward to what will be coming out in the future. It would be nice to see "Song of the South" re-released in its entirety, but we will see what Disney has in store for us next. Those who remember the show will love this collection. My personal favorite on every disc is the special features. Disney always manages to find old archival footage that manages to take our breath away again.


5 out of 5 stars The Fox so Cunning and Free   November 13, 2009
Kimberly J. Foster (Ledyard, CT)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Great box with cool pin. Very fun for us baby boomers who made zees on everything. I even had a Zorro lunch pail!


5 out of 5 stars Thank You Walt Disney   November 13, 2009
Sue A. Rodkey
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I have just finished watching both sets of this classic series and I can't say enough how thrilled I am to finally have all the episodes in their original black and white format.

For me, this is a vast improvement over the colorized version first made available in France and then through the Disney Movie Club. I was always irritated by the color bleeding into areas it shouldn't have, especially in the trees. These transfers are amazing. I am hoping that these sell out so that once again Disney gets a clear message that thee is still really a market for this material and I'm am desperately hoping to see a Treasures set of the Peoples and Places series!!!



4 out of 5 stars Price Increase will kill follow-up sales   November 11, 2009
Mike Bifulco
1 out of 5 found this review helpful

First, I just received my order of the First Season of Disney's ZORRO. It's great, fond memories of watching these shows on TV as a kid came rushing to mind, prompting my return to amazon for the second season. I was shocked to see that not only had the price of season 2 jumped to $44.99, the price of season one had jumped to $49.99 when I just paid $36.99 a few days ago. I will wait. If the price gets reduced, I may consider a purchase of season 2. If the stock sells out before a price reduction, I will be content to enjoy the first season and think twice before I purchase another Disney release of anything. Gasoline doesn't jump in price that fast.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 24





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