Paul:
They just barely got it done
by design. Warner Home Video had little confidence in
B5's drawing power on home video after the failure of the VHS tapes, and have always been generally averse to releasing television shows. (
B5 was the
only one-hour drama they ever released on VHS. They're other TV releases were all animated kid's shows, and rarely even planned as complete releaseas, as
B5 was.)
Warner Bros. only put the first DVD out after years of fan pressure, and because the success of
The X-Files inevitably made them wonder if
their cult show might have similar legs. But they didn't really think it would. So they released it in the spirit of the guy who buys
one lottery ticket a week. It would be nice if he hit the jackpot, but he doesn't think he will, and he's sure not going to "invest" a lot in buying extra tickets that will only marginally increase his odds of success.
So Warner Home Video released the first disc as a "test" (which is exactly what I had suggested they do in 1999 - put the same two movies out as a barebones double-feature disc and see how they sold.)
I don't think we can judge the eventual series release from the first movie disc. It was always a way to get the show out in the marketplace as cheaply as possible (both in terms of production cost and sale price) to see if anyone bought it. Since WHV privately believed that virtually no one would, this minimized their financial risk.
Now they know there is a market for the show. But they also know, from all the same fan feedback that forced them to release the disc in the first place, that fans will
not buy a substandard release of the episodes. They were considering a full-season set approach to
B5 even as they were releasing
Friends and
South Park in "best of" sets precisely because they knew that's the only thing that would sell.
Now WHV (and the industry at large) seems to be "getting it" when it comes to releasing TV shows on DVD. See this
thread for the latest info on the
B5 release, and for links to a couple of articles on both that release and the general subject of TV shows on DVD.
Regards,
Joe
------------------
Joseph DeMartino
Sigh Corps
Pat Tallman Division
joseph-demartino@att.net