Saturday, June 8, 2024

Welcome Back Kotter: The Complete Series On DVD Review


Welcome Back Kotter starring Gabe Kaplan is based on his experiences growing up and attending New Utrecht High School in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, which is also the neighborhood where he grew up. The series was a hit particularly in the first two seasons, but gradually began to go down in the ratings in part because the cast grew older to the point of no longer being able to pass as high school aged teenagers, John Travolta’s rise to movie stardom with the back to back hits Saturday Night Fever and Grease. Then Gabe Kaplan had issues with the production of the series resulting in him appearing in fewer episodes in the fourth and final season along with Travolta, whose role was that of a guest star in the fourth season. The series is noteworthy for portraying an urban grittiness that was indicative of the 1970s sitcoms in general. If you want to get an idea of how the concept of shows like Welcome Back Kotter changed in the 1980s, instead of a series with remedial students like Welcome Back Kotter, you had a sitcom filled with honors level students in the 1980s entitled Head Of The Class. The at times depressing and serious tones of programs like All In The Family, Good Times and the like gave way to Reagan era upscale shows like Family Ties and The Cosby Show. Television and movies reflect to a certain degree the changing landscape of pop culture which can be seen in more character driven sitcoms that featured characters who were neither wealthy, nor poor like Friends and Seinfeld in the 1990s or the rise of “Geek Culture” in the 2000s reflected in sitcoms like The Big Bang Theory in the 2010s. What I find interesting now is that the sitcom in the 2020s has changed yet again into dramadies with more serialized story arcs in part because no one watches free over the air broadcast television like they used to anymore. Everyone streams and so there is no single sitcom that reflects contemporary culture except to state with the diversity of programming on streaming and the model of how people consume entertainment in the 2020s, I could not definitively state any one comedy that reflects this decade other than to say with diversity being a part of the American zeitgeist in the 2020s, maybe not being able point out a specific program is reflective of the world we living in the era of choice, but with choice comes responsibility.


Warner Brothers Discovery Home Entertainment’s DVD edition of Welcome Back Kotter The Complete Series presents all 95 episodes across 12 discs with the seasons color coded on the discs as green, brown, blue and wha I guess could be perceived as being gold for the final season though some might see it as being mustard, yellow, or simply something else. The episodes look surprisingly good considering the native format of DVD being 480i and imagine that upscaled to 4K UHD 2160p picture quality. I am impressed it holds up with only an understandable softness since there was no such thing as digital video in the 1970s and Welcome Back Kotter was videotaped before a live audience. If you want to see how far DVD video mastering has come, check out Mel Brooks’ Blazing Saddles on DVD from 1997 upscaled to 4K. It looks horrible. Clear English Dolby Digital Stereo Sound along with optional English Subtitles are encoded across all 12 discs. The menus are standard interactive still framed enhanced for widescreen televisions while the episodes are presented in the original broadcast aspect ratio. There are no extra value features. The discs are housed within a  large EPIK PACK clear keep case.


This may be the final opportunity to own Welcome Back Kotter: The Complete Series on any form of physical media so if you want something tangible to hold onto that does not require a subscription and or internet access to enjoy, buy Welcome Back Kotter: The Complete Series on DVD when it debuts at retailers on and offline on June 11, 2024 courtesy of Warner Brothers Discovery Home Entertainment.


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