|  | Actors: Peter Graves, Greg Morris, Peter Lupus, Bob Johnson, Martin Landau Studio: Paramount
List Price: $49.99 Buy New: $29.29 as of 11/23/2009 20:45 CST details You Save: $20.70 (41%)
New (32) Used (10) Collectible (1) from $27.83
Seller: mariners20 Rating: 28 reviews Sales Rank: 7010
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Full Screen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Portuguese (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 6 Running Time: 1155 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.5 x 0.9
MPN: 138974 UPC: 097361389745 EAN: 0097361389745 ASIN: B001BN4WI6
Release Date: October 7, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Showing reviews 26-28 of 28
Mission Impossible: The Fifth TV Season August 23, 2008 Dale Mudgway (New Zealand) 8 out of 14 found this review helpful
so good to see "MISSION IMPOSSIBLE" surface on dvd, just one plea. I know that there were 7 seasons of this series all together and that including this one the company has re;eased 5 of them.... please please please once that 7th season has been released, if not before, please release the "MISSION IMPOSSIBLE 1988" two season series with Peter Graves, Phil Morris, Tony Hamilton e.t.c. thanks :-)
one of the BEST since season three~ great writing~ July 20, 2008 M. Lung (Indiana) 16 out of 21 found this review helpful
Peter Graves, Greg Morris, Peter Lupus and Leonard Nimoy return for yet another season of this series~ NO FULL TIME FEMALE LEAD has been seen since Barbara Bain left at the end of Season Three~ along comes Leslie Ann Warren~ unfortunabely she is bit of a bore~
what makes up for anything else is the WRITING IS BACK ~AND SOME GREAT GUEST STARS~ SEVERAL OF THE BEST ARE~
The Killer has Robert Conrad as a Hired Killer who changes his plans EVERYTIME HE MOVES ABOUT~ so to trap him is even more difficult~ his natural ability to "blend" is fantasic and the team sets up very detailed surveilance and one of the most fun clever plot twists we have not seen since season one~
Homecoming~ Jim Phelps travels back to his home town where a serial killer suddenly emerges~ a Vietnam Vet is the primary suspect but the team moves in to help solve this well written and acted epiode~ one of the BEST~
DECOY is fun~ watch the team help a brother and sister escape under the eyes their many guardS with a mini racer in the back of a hearse~ WELL WRITTEN AND SOME CLEVER GADGETS~
NOW BACK TO LESLIE~ she was "very" young when she made this series~~ and HER BACK GROUND WAS SINGING/DANCING~ suddenly she attempts acting~ I LOVED HER IN VICTOR / VICTORIA SHE IS GREAT BUT IN THIS SERIES SHE ALWAYS FALLS SHORT~ SHE ONLY LASTED ONE SEASON ...THANK GOODNESS~ lol but THE CLEVER PLOTS AND GREAT WRITING PULL THIS SEASON BACK UP WHERE WE LOVE IT~ I GIVE IT A SOLID 9 OUT OF 10 FOR WRITING IN MOST OF THE EPISODES~
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE #5: The Hip Revolution! June 30, 2008 Thomas Rucki (Paris, France) 47 out of 53 found this review helpful
Good evening. This is the fifth season (1970-1971) of "Mission: Impossible" which is fully produced by Bruce Lansbury from season 4 and supervised by top writer Laurence Heath who, nevertheless, produces six episodes. Here is a complete revision of the series because of its ideological shift through a leaning towards the thematics of the youth movement (for instance: students' agitators and radicals in "Takeover", NLF guerrillas in "The Rebel", far left terrorists in "The Hostage" and subversive revolutionaries in "Blast").
You will find some deep changes: a new-hip-younger "regular" leading lady named Dana Lambert (played by Lesley Ann Warren) introduced in "Flip Side" (in which she performs two folk songs), a replacement of Willy in twelve episodes out of twenty three via a young physician named Doug Robert and also named Doug Lang (played by Sam Elliott), a faster-harder-urgent urban main theme music (moreover, four episodes contain the original main theme music), no more multi-part episodes, a recursive portable gadget used to stun that can be described as a "golden needle ring" (created by writer Ken Pettus in a season 4 episode of "The Wild Wild West" and introduced in a late MISSION season 4 entitled "The Crane", and over-used by producer Bruce Lansbury), no dossier scenes, a dramatic prologue-teaser followed directly by the tape scene before the opening credits, downbeat and realistic kind of narratives with accidents and failures, assignments in progress, improvisations, and caught up agents. The fashion design of the team is also renewed and reflects the trend (casual or outrageous) of the 1970's: pay attention to Jim's outfits (suits and sunglasses) during the tape scenes which will blossom from season 6.
Anyway, two of the series' main ingredients remain: a master of disguises (Paris) and foreign intrigues (around sixteen). Actor Leonard Nimoy shines again in these offerings: brainwashed Fred Stark in "My Friend, My Enemy", Kabuki performer Nakamura Taizo in "Butterfly", abducted business man Walter A. Phelan in "The Hostage", criminal Alfredo Sanchez/old convict Martin Sanchez in "The Catafalque", professional gambler Harry Kroll in "The Merchant". You'll still discover top episodes: the masterpiece "The Killer" (guest starring Robert Conrad), "The Innocent" (a controversial plot re-written by Laurence Heath that calls into question the methods of the IMFers who blackmail a young "hippie" scientist so that he works with them), "Flight" (guest starring John Colicos), "The Catafalque" (written by scripts genius Paul Playdon and guest starring John Vernon) and good ones: "My Friend, My Enemy" (guest starring Peter Mark Richman), "The Merchant" (guest starring George Sanders), "The Hostage" (guest starring Lou Antonio), "The Amateur" (guest starring Anthony Zerbe), "The Missile" (guest starring David Sheiner), "The Party", "The Field". As in season 4, intimistic stories centered around IMFers return: Paris ("My Friend, My Enemy" in which we learn his past as a magician), Jim ("Homecoming" in which we get a glimpse of his hometown and his family background), Barney ("Cat's Paw" in which we meet his brother). The music scores are powerful: "The Killer and "Takeover" by Lalo Schifrin and "The Rebel" by Hugo Montenegro.
Showing reviews 26-28 of 28
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