The Buccaneers: The Complete Series
Facts
| Cast | Robert Shaw, Peter Hammond, Wilfred Downing, Paul Hansard, Brian Rawlinson and Jane Asher |
| DVD Release | August 15, 2006 |
| Running Time | 1053 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 683904505439 |
| Buy this item | $8.47 at Amazon.com As of Jul 26 18:40 EDT (details) 3 DVD, Mill Creek Entertainment, Usually ships in 24 hours, Black & White, Closed-captioned, Mono, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language) Or 37 new from $6.76, 13 used from $6.74 |
About The Buccaneers: The Complete Series
Specifications:
- Language: English
- Format: 3 DVD's, NTSC, Region 1
- Run Time: 19 hours 30 minutes
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Included:
1. Buccaneers, The - Articles of War
With the food ship several weeks from arriving, the meat rations for New Providence have been limited to the sick and the children. The crew of "The Sultana" are tired of eating fish and wish to have some beef. The crew also is upset to learn the prisoners of war are receiving beef, leading some of the men to make plans for releasing the prisoners and pretending to be sick. Things don't go according to their plans and Tempest has to fix things right.
2. Buccaneers, The - Before the Mast
The Spanish blockcade of New Providence has made the food and gunpowder supplies dangerously low. A British ship is enroute to the island to re-supply the settlement and the Spanish captain "El Supremo" intends to stop it. The Spanish sneak aboard "The Sultana", Dan Tempest's ship, and set a fire that forces Tempest to run his ship aground on the beach. Will Tempest and his crew repair "The Sultana" in time to stop "El Supremo" from attacking the supply ship?
3. Buccaneers, The - Blackbeard
A new British governor arrives at the port of New Providence assigned the task of bringing law and order to the British colony. Authorized to grant pardons to any buccaneer Product Description
Website Links
- Movie Review Query Engine - Directory of movie reviews.
- IMDb - Features plot summaries, reviews, cast lists, and theatre schedules.
- Art.com - Search for The Buccaneers: The Complete Series posters.
Similar Movies
User Reviews
Average user review:| A pirate's life for me! |
Besides Shaw, the BUCCANEERS cast includes Peter Hammond as Lt. Beamish, Wilfred Downing as Dickon, Paul Hansard as Taffy, Brian Rawlinson as Gaff and Edwin Richfield as Armando. Jane Asher is a guest star in episode #32 ("Flip and Jenny"). Asher was engaged to Paul McCartney during much of the 1960s.
This is a very well done television show that will appeal to young and old alike. Highly recommended. And for more swashbuckling adventure, the ULTIMATE PIRATES COLLECTION is better than a barrel of grog and a chest of gold dubloons. Arrrrrrrr!
.
The following sequential program list includes episode titles, original airdates and guest stars (where indicated).
(.#1) Blackbeard (9/22/56) - Alfie Bass/Peter Bennett
(.#2) The Raider (9/29/56) - Jane Griffiths/Brian Worth
(.#3) Captain Dan Tempest (10/3/56) - George Margo/Judith Wyler/Peter Bennett
(.#4) Dan Tempest's War With Spain (10/10/56)
(.#5) The Wasp (10/17/56)
(.#6) Whale Gold (10/24/56)
(.#7) The Slave Ship (10/31/56) - Earl Cameron
(.#8) Gunpowder Plot (11/7/56)
(.#9) The Ladies (11/14/56) - Roy Purcell
(#10) The Surgeon of Sangre Rojo (11/21/56)
(#11) Before The Mast (11/28/56)
(#12) Dan Tempest and the Amazons (12/5/56) - Roy Purcell
(#13) Articles of War (12/12/56)
(#14) The Hand of the Hawk (12/19/56)
(#15) Marooned (12/26/56)
(#16) Gentleman Jack and the Lady (1/2/57) - Hazel Court
(#17) Mr. Beamish and the Hangman's Noose (1/9/57)
(#18) Dead Man's Rock (1/16/57)
(#19) Blood Will Tell (1/23/57) - John Dearth
(#20) Dangerous Cargo (1/30/57) - Roy Purcell
(#21) The Return Of Calico Jack (2/6/57)
(#22) Ghost Ship (2/13/57)
(#23) Conquistador (2/20/57)
(#24) Mother Doughty's Crew (2/27/57)
(#25) Conquest Of New Providence (3/6/57)
(#26) Hurricane (3/13/57) - Ewen Solon/Derek Sydney
(#27) Cutlass Wedding (3/20/57)
(#28) AztecTreasue (3/27/57) - Tommy Duggan
(#29) Prize Of Andalusia (4/3/57)
(#30) Dan Tempest Holds An Auction (4/10/57)
(#31) The Spy Aboard (4/17/57)
(#32) Flip and Jenny (4/24/57) - Jane Asher/John Dearth
(#33) Indian Fighters (5/1/57)
(#34) Mistress Higgins' Treasure (5/8/57) - Ewen Solon/Roy Purcell
(#35) To The Rescue (5/15/57)
(#36) The Decoy (5/22/57)
(#37) Instrument Of War (5/29/57) - Derek Sydney
(#38) Pirate Honour (6/5/57)
(#39) Printer's Devil (6/12/57) July 31, 2007
| For Die-hard Piratics |
| Thigh High Leather Boots! |
I loved this series when I was 10. Allowing for the technology of the time, it's still a fun show, with good dialogue and good acting. Camera work is generally tight and the sets don't shake.
I am still in love with Lt. Beamish, and the wary relationship he and Tempest develop. But after watching and rewatching 50 years later, I find Hammond's Beamish is the best character in the show. Certainly the most developed one. (And this close to drop-dead gorgeous). Shaw was pretty much playing himself. But Hammond fleshed out what was essentially a comedy relief role of a naive bumbler with authority figure issues into someone with real grit underneath, added the touchstone orf "King and Country", honor and friendship, and went toe to toe with Shaw's ego and came out dead even or sometimes ahead.
The ad-libs and one-upmanship in this old series are just a tickle. I have no idea of what the professional relationship between Shaw and Hammond was, but the two characters really click.
Pity that Beamish disappears after episode 26. The show loses some spark as Tempest has no one to really bounce off of. Beamish was the only one who butted heads with him.
This is a Broadway musical waiting to happen. Someone please show this to Mel Brooks!
A terrific Yo Ho.
And thigh-high leather boots. . . .
One year later:
not only has it held up well and Beamish is as endearing as I remember, I actually managed to locate and contact the actor - Peter Hammond - who portrayed this delightful character.
After several phone conversations, he's 85 and delightful and charming, he barks and bites, he's coy and bright and a veteran curmudgeon all in a neat grandfatherly package.
memories don't come better than this. If I had met him when I was 10 I would have been struck dumb and brain-dead.
It's astounding to me the number of "official" media reviews of this old show I read that dismiss the Beamish character as a nearly total git when I am seeing the character evolve and mature. And I think that had to be Hammond's doing.
March 22, 2007
| Robert Shaw The Pirate |
| Let's Go A Rovin' And Join The Buccaneers! |
Following on the heels of their two previous classic TV releases (the 1954 version of "Sherlock Holmes" with Ronald Howard and "Victory at Sea," the early 1950s World War II documentary series), Mill Creek Entertainment offers all 39 episodes of this entertaining series. Given the low selling price for this release, I had low expectations for this DVD set, but was very pleasantly surprised at the visual quality of the episodes. These episodes are very near the quality that one would expect for a classic TV release from a major studio. There are some very minimal film specks and an occasional tape roll but, on an overall basis, Mill Creek has more than exceeded my expectations for this 50 year old series ("The Buccaneers" began U.S. broadcasts in September of 1956). There are 13 episodes included on each of three single-sided, dual-layered discs, but the transfers are very solid; I've seen no significant issues regarding compression or digital breakup on the episodes. Unfortunately, the Mill Creek Entertainment logo appears twice for about 15 seconds in each episode; it's not too distracting and is the only real negative for this release.
There are a couple of interesting notes on "The Buccaneers" and this release from Mill Creek Entertainment. In episode #9, titled "The Ladies," Robert Shaw is heard singing "Farewell and adieu to you, fair Spanish ladies. Farewell and adieu, you ladies of Spain . . ." Shaw would reprise this very same tune 19 years later in "Jaws." Shaw also returned to the genre in the 1976 film "Swashbuckler." Mill Creek incorrectly describes "The Buccaneers" as being television's very first pirate series on the back of the DVD box. That's not correct; "The Buccaneers" was produced in 1956 whereas "The Adventures of Long John Silver" (with Robert Newton reprising his signature role from two theatrical films), was produced in Australia in 1955 for syndication in the U.S. and England. It was Australia's first television production (it wasn't even shown there for a few years until the country had a nationwide feed) and was filmed entirely in color. Mill Creek has included 14 (of 26) episodes of this series in "The Ultimate Pirate Collection" which Amazon also sells.
For fans of classic TV and costume adventure series from the 1950s, I can easily recommend "The Buccaneers" . . . five stars and a hoist of the Jolly Roger!
October 9, 2006
More reviews at Amazon.com ...





