Friday, December 14, 2012
Weekend Discussion: Novela DVD Sets; Do you own any and do you recommend them?
As of now I have found no abridged novela boxed set that even gets close to the original. They feel like highlights of events and no more. The main characters have less depth. Often some entire minor and even supporting characters end up on the cutting room floor and some subplots make no sense because of this. The greatest love scenes usually survive the editing process, but the equally great confrontations are usually missing. Original theme songs from the broadcast usually are missing and others are substituted, and in some cases that changes the entire soundtrack. I wonder why the networks bother, especially because the DVD set usually contains about 5% of the total running time.
If you have any of these, let loose with your praise and/or criticisms. If anyone from Televisa, Telemundo, or Venevision is reading this they need to know how we feel.
Labels: telenovelas, weekend
Oh wait actually I forgot, I did start to watch Soy tú Dueña with this same sister (because she thinks Fernando Colunga is absolutely divine) and she got bored. I think it was just her. I didn't think it was soooo bad, but then again, I am already familiar with the storyline of Soy tú Dueña.
I'm curious to see what they've done with La que no podía amar, as well as Teresa. (These are probably my two top faves.) I would love to be able to recommend these DVDs to friends and family members as an intro to telenovelas, but I fear that they'll be incomprehensible unless I am there to "fill in the blanks" as they watch. And that isn't always possible!
So in a way I think that the DVDs can serve a purpose, even if they are butchered. Watch them, get a "synopsis" of the story, then watch the whole series via downloaded episodes. It'll help those with iffy Spanish comprehension skills (like me!).
Oh another thing about Amor Real on DVD. There were two DVDs, I think both two-sided. But one of the DVDs was a "making of" DVD (not the actual novela). It was some butt-patting congratulatory documentary about the producer, I think? I was thinking, "Seriously?" They COULD have shown us more of the novela, so it wouldn't have been as butchered up, but instead they make us pay for a "making of" DVD that we aren't going to care about nearly as much as the ACTUAL NOVELA. I thought that was ridiculous.
Eventually, I bought two shorter-than-usual uncut telenovelas: Azul Tequila and Como en el Cine. I enjoyed these, too, though they made me recognize another plus of the abridged versions: the abridged versions cut out a lot of unimportant sub-plots, which as far as I was concerned was a big advantage. I felt this even more strongly once I started to watch full-length telenovelas on TV.
Now, of course, I've been watching only the full-length novelas for several years. I'm more used to their pacing, and at times I even appreciate some of the tangential sub-plots. Even so, I pick my telenovelas pretty carefully. The majority of them seem to me much too hackneyed and predictable, and many run on for longer than I'd like. Amor Bravío has been a pleasant surprise, since the pacing seems much quicker and the plot less stereotyped than most.
Once I've seen a full-length telenovela on TV, I have no interest in buying an abridged version of the same telenovela. Indeed, the only telenovela that I've already seen that I was hoping to buy is La Reina del Sur. By far the best telenovela I've ever seen, it ran for three action-packed months on Telemundo. Interestingly, it's now available for purchase in an uncut version but not in an abridgement. I think I'd hate an abridgement--there was little if any fat to cut. I was delighted that it was available uncut, but, alas, there are no Spanish or English subtitles in the version for purchase. For this telenovela more than most, I need subtitles.
There are some shows I'd buy the whole long unedited collection. Still waiting for the rest of Knot's Landing to come out on DVD. I have Seasons 1 & 2 and then they stopped making them.
In fact, if you hadn't seen the original, you'd just think Esperanza & Hernan met, fell in love & had a baby...you wouldn't have known that Ruben was Espe's baby daddy, was threatening her and Teresa was involved with all of this because the DVD pretty much erased the Ruben/Genoveva/Mayra characters.
I have Manana es Para Siempre & Sortilegio on DVD as well.
I had no desire to get La Fuerza del Destino or Soy Tu Duena on DVD and will not buy Abismo de Pasion on DVD either.
The one of El Privilegio de Amar isn't too bad. It has all the original music and enough of a lead-in so you understand the characters' motivations, but the brilliant confrontation scenes are completely missing. It also dropped off the real final Karmageddon of Ana Joaquina.
More tomorrow night; I need to catch a few zzzz's.
However, I keep buying them because this is the only way I can pay tribute to the creators. And they look good on my shelves.
To my knowledge La antrocha encendida's (a great historical telenovela produced by Ernesto Alonso) DVD version is one of the fews that haven't been abridged.
I didn't see the full length version of Rubi, but I found the plot easy to follow on DVD.
DVDs I didn't enjoy much: Maria La Del Barrio (too dated, bad soundtrack, plot too convoluted to boil down) and Pasion (very convoluted, no subtitles, I have no idea what's going on, and it's kinda boring).
As I was watching "le gran noche" of AB last night it reminded me of some of these DVDs. It gave adequate time to the "prologue" to understand what was going on but so severely cut things down the road that a lot of this felt like it was coming out of left field.
I agree that when you watch a movie right after reading the book, one is struck by how much is left out, by how a gripping scene which went on for 20 pages in a book is done in 30 seconds in the movie. But the movie is a different animal, best appreciated for its own strengths. And that's what I appreciate in the abridged DVDs, the Spanish, the actors, the costumes, and the wild storylines.
Some of my favorites were Destilando Amor, La Fea Mas Bea, Alborada, Rubi, Dame Chocolate and Pasion de Gavilanes.
There are sites that sell complete sets but I have no idea if they are legit or whether what you get is a quality product.
What I'm more interested in finding are sites that allow me to view the episodes (I did that years ago with En Nombre del Amor, to catch up before switching finally to the telenovela in progress). However, it seems that the ones I've found more recently all want me to download and install a special downloader, and my searches on Google/Bing/DuckDuckGo indicate that many people who have installed these downloaders have problems with them, and that the downloaders are at times a source of malware.
I try to only buy the DVD's for the ones I've watched live or on line, or ones that have fave leads in them (Silvia Navarro, Juan Soler, Colunga, Noriega, Lucero, Guy Ecker, Jorge Salinas). That has actually led me to some pretty good movies--Amor Letra por Letra (Silvia), Labios Rojos (Silvia & Jorge), La Otra Familia (Jorge & Luis Roberto Guzman), Ladron que Roba a ladron (Colunga & Soto).
If I have watched the whole thing on tv or on-line, and love it, I buy a DVD sort of as a souvenir. I bought Amor Real as the first one ever and followed it pretty well (even though they cut out one of their most explicit love scenes), then Alborada, Eva Luna, Sortilegio, MEPS, CME (they cut out several of my favorite scenes between Silv & Juan, just to move the rest of the story along, but left enough to satisfy), Maria Isabel.
The ones I bought but haven't seen, because a favorite actor is in the lead, is the luck of the draw. Heridas de Amor (Bracamontes & Guy) was so chopped up I started to read the recap and looked for it on YouTube. Silly story and Guy wasn't really right for the role, IMHO.
I fervently desire to have and to hold for evva is Silvia & Diego Olivera's Azteca version of Montecristo. I watched the whole thing on YouTube almost two years ago, but am going through it again. I'm amazed at how much more I understand the second time through.
My Spanish is ok enough to watch without subtitles or CC's. Can't say the same about movies. I don't know what the difference is perhaps the words themselves or cadence, but I need the subtitles. Maybe I understand tn's better because they use the same phrases over and over and are easily recognizable--No me toques; Suelteme; Largate; No es cierto; Te amo; Yo mas.
END of ESSAY
IMHO, the main reason I purchased the DVDs for Amor Real, Alborada, Pasion, MEPS and STuD is that they contained an english subtitle function. Also AR, Alborada and Pasion included extras like cast bios and bloopers. AMF did undergo lots of edits, and the music is all different from the TV version, but if you've never seen it at all, and can't find the original full length television version, it does cover the major plot points of the story.
Kelly
Hobre de misterio, yours is a great way of looking at it.
-- Sticker shock; not that many people would be willing to pay $100 or more.
-- Length, because they want the viewers to come back to the network to watch their new productions. You can't add more hours to a day.
If I were a producer at Televisa I would try to promote the idea of simultaneously producing a feature film version of each prime time novela production. If Peter Jackson could shoot the Lord of the Rings trilogy all in one shooting schedule, this should certainly be possible and desirable.
I watched Alma de Hierro on DVD. It had won all kinds of awards and I missed it completely when it was broadcast here. There's lots missing on the DVDs, but I think an abridged version was probably fine. I didn't love it and can imagine myself getting frustrated by its length if watching for months on end. Some of the performances were excellent, lots of actors I like, etc. So, all in all, it was worth it. And, in fact, I think I might have rented it, so no cost.
On the other hand, PVAA is way too good for an abridged version. I was sorry that I watched it in that way, but once I started, I just couldn't stop.
So, I guess it depends on what you want to in viewing them and the quality of the novela to begin with.
"If I were a producer at Televisa I would try to promote the idea of simultaneously producing a feature film version of each prime time novela production. "
They used to do this back in the 50's and 60's. That's why you can find film versions of some classic novelas (like Teresa).
Jarocha
also got Sortilegio, just for William Levy.
I've watched half of it so far and am enjoying it and not having any problems to speak of in following the abridged story-line. JS is at his finest (in both senses of the word!)
Karamy
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