Little House on the Prairie - Special Edition Movie Boxed Set (Look Back to Yesterday / Bless All the Dear Children / The Last Farewell)
|
| List Price: | $34.98 |
| Price: | $31.49 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Price as of Wed 08th Sep,2010 02:44 pm CDT
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
33 new or used available from $17.25
Average customer review:Product Description
Although the beloved family drama, Little House on the Prairie, ran its course in March 1983, there were three addition movies made due to popular demand.
Look Back at Yesterday (Dec 1983) Charles Ingalls returns to Walnut Grove. During his stay, he learns that Albert, a doctor in training, has contracted a blood disease that is nearly always fatal. Also, an economic recession that threatens to destroy the community.
Bless All the Dear Children (Dec 1984) Rose, Laura and Almanzo's infant daughter, is kidnapped during Christmas. The family discovers that she was stolen by a woman who was longing to have a child of her own.
The Last Farewell (Feb 1984) This final adventure finds Walnut Grove being purchased by an evil miner. Rather than being thrown off their land, the townsfolk exact a more spectacular method of leaving their beloved town.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2944 in DVD
- Brand: Lions Gate
- Released on: 2006-11-28
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Number of discs: 5
- Formats: Box set, Color, DVD, Special Edition, NTSC
- Dimensions: .80 pounds
- Running time: 360 minutes
Similar Items
![]() | Little House on the Prairie - The Pilot Price: $14.98 $6.87 Based on the best-selling books by Laura Ingalls Wilder, this classic, produced and directed by Michael Landon, takes us from the woods of Wisconsin to the plains of Kansas where the Ingalls struggle to build a new life. With indomitable courage that celebrates the resilience of the human spirit, the Ingalls face endless challenges and experience countless adventures as they... |
![]() | Little House on the Prairie - The Complete Season 9 Price: $34.98 $15.99 Depicts the life of a frontier family on the Great Plains towards the end of the nineteenth century.... |
![]() | Little House on the Prairie - The Complete Season 8 Price: $34.98 $15.98 Best known for its life-affirming lessons and heartwarming adventures, "LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE" made its TV debut in 1974 and significantly altered the landscape of television. Loyal fans will relive these exciting and touching adventures, while new viewers will discover the Ingalls’ unconquerable courage to build a new way of life. The series, nominated for 17 Emmy... |
![]() | Little House on the Prairie - The Complete Season 7 Price: $34.98 $15.47 Best known for its life-affirming lessons and heartwarming adventures, "LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE" made its TV debut in 1974 and significantly altered the landscape of television. Loyal fans will relive these exciting and touching adventures, while new viewers will discover the Ingalls' unconquerable courage to build a new way of life. The series, nominated for... |
![]() | Little House on the Prairie: The Complete Television Series Price: $234.98 $115.49 Follows the lives of a farm family and their neighbors in the Great Plains at the end of the nineteenth century.... |
ListmaniaLists Items
- Little House on the Prairie - TV Series
- Families in Fiction "Classic & Contemporary"
- My favorite movies
- dvd tv collection
Tags: tv series, little house, family movies, tv show on dvd, melissa gilbert, michael landon jr, shannen doherty, alex sharp, alison arngrim, allison balson, alvy moore, angella kaye, based on the little house books, charles cyphers, child s cry, christian faith dvd, colin hamilton, cooper huckabee, dabbs greer, david friedman,
Customer Reviews
Best series in the history of television
(Updated) Series on a whole: 5 stars++. Stories on this particular set: 4-1/2 stars. Video quality: 3-1/2 stars. Extras: 4 stars.
Why would I call this the "Best series in the history of television"? ...because it's BIG in heart and soul, the characters and stories have TREMENDOUS depth, and it's not bogged down by the politics of your typical western, or typical show for that matter. The storylines could go anywhere, and focus on anyone, or anything. There didn't have to be a villain of the week, a murder, etc. Come to think of it, this is one of the most "murder-less" westerns I have ever seen. If people died, it was more from life's hardships in the 1800's than from anything else. It may not have ended anywhere near as well as it came in, but when you look back at the series on a whole, I would still rank this as being the best of all TV series, and for a number of reasons.
The appeal of this series is much broader than most people give it credit for. The show wasn't just for little girls, as anyone looking at the cover of one of the Little House books might conclude. It was more a show about how to deal with the unexpected, with changes in life, and how to get along with your neighbors. There are life lessons to be learned here for everyone, from little girls to old men.
I doubt that we will ever again see a show quite like this, which so graciously teaches the lost values that we need in times like these. Network TV has become a desolate wasteland of high-tech crime scene dramas, court case TV, reality TV, infomercials, talk shows, extreme sports, and news programs. You will be hard-pressed to find much of a heart or soul in any of them, mainly just a lot of computer "gee-whiz" wizardry, and for the most part a waste of time in general. Meanwhile, Little House delivers both heart AND soul, so much so in the subtle ways that it influences you, that you can't help but walk away a better person afterwards.
Even if they did bring a show like this back (and they`ve tried), it would be EXTREMELY difficult to match the production values you will find here without a sky-high budget. Not to mention, many of the best character actors once employed by Hollywood, (many of whom appeared on Little House), are now long since dead.
SPOILERS FOLLOW... About this particular set... After Season 9 ended, a deal was inked to conclude the "Little House on the Prairie" series with the final three tele-movies contained here, the UNOFFICIAL "Season 10", which wraps up the series in a very peculiar and jaw-dropping way, literally going out with a BANG!!
Whether or not anyone likes the idea of the town being blown to smithereens in the end, or with the direction the series took in it's later years, Michael Landon and crew continued to crank-out very touching, emotionally-charged episodes to the bitter end. Casting, acting, directing, writing, set design, and the beautiful, harmonious music composed by the late David Rose all remained high-quality throughout the series. I can't say enough about the fine acting and music though, as well as the town layout - all First Class! Well... There were a few less than stellar casting decisions near the end of the run, but nothing worth spoiling the series over.
The final three films are somewhat of a mixed bag, and leave you with mixed emotions. I probably would have wrote them a bit differently if it were up to me, but they are still VERY MUCH worth the price of admission. The saddest, and my choice as the best of the three would be the first one, "Look Back To Yesterday", which will likely produce a few tears (video and sound quality is very good to excellent). As for "Bless All The Dear Children", the story is somewhat uneven and seems to drag in the middle, however the ending is quite good, and redeems any flaws. In all honesty though, I can't figure out why on earth they felt the need to tell this particular story as one of the last three of all time (video quality is good to very good). "The Last Farewell"... What can I say?... Does anybody really want to see the town get blown-up?? Michael Landon has always told stories about overcoming great adversity, and carrying on, but I feel that he took things a little too far here, maybe for no other reason than simply because he could. Not the best note for the series to go out on, but a very dramatic exit nonetheless, and once again it may bring you to tears. The video quality on this one, which I would have expected to be great, being the final installment, was actually the WORST of the three. The print that Imavision used for the transfer was surprisingly not the greatest. It was fairly dark, and the colors were faded. A real disappointment, as I expected something better for what I paid. Concerning the extras, the interviews of the two Melissa's were quite well done. I was hoping for more extras though.
A few odds & ends and closing comments... If I had any say with the powers that be, I would NOT have destroyed the exterior town setting at the Big Sky Movie Ranch (a big chunk of the ranch was recently sold to developers), and rather would have tried to preserve it as a museum/tour/theme park/resort, for all to enjoy in the years that followed. Not a chance of that happening now of course, after the final episode, plus the land around the shooting location is being developed like mad. Very poor decisions in the end by those responsible.
I would also like to add that while MANY of the episodes from Season box sets 1 through 3 were drop-dead GORGEOUSLY restored, I would like to see some kind of effort put into restoring the remainder of the series, which was very much a disappointing (to say the least!) "hit and miss" restoration effort, even if I have to pay for them all over again for the improved versions in another release of some kind. The series was THAT GOOD!!
Question: Why has there never been a music CD compilation of David Rose's best work from this series? They can put out a 4-disc collection of the original one-season Battlestar Galactica, but nothing for David Rose's Little House work?? ...someone who is considered to be the best in the business??
R.I.P., Little House, and thanks to all involved for putting on such a fine show. You have created a masterpiece that will be enjoyed for generations to come. Now if only Imavision or somebody else would restore the episodes that so desperately need it from the original 35mm prints, like they did with several of the early episodes, then we would really have something special.
This would make a great Christmas gift!
I am so happy that these TV movies of "Little House On The Prairie" have found a new home on DVD. These are such beautiful and heart-warming movies. I have seen them many times on TBS as a child growing up. But I do not believe they have been shown on TV Land or The Hallmark Channel, making these tales very rare in recent years. This DVD is coming out at the perfect time because it would make a great Christmas gift or stocking stuffer.
These are the TV movies included on the "Little House On The Prairie - Special Edition Movie Boxed Set:"
Look Back To Yesterday (original air date: December 12, 1983)
Charles comes home from the big city to Walnut Grove to try to get the farmers to share their crops. He brings his oldest son, Albert. While in Walnut Grove Albert displays mysterious medical symptoms. Charles brings Albert to a specialist and finds out that he has a serious disease. This is actually a very sad episode, so be warned. Some say that Albert died in this episode, others say that he was able to beat the disease and go on to fulfill his dream of becoming a doctor. What happens to Albert is never stated, instead the movie lets the viewer form their own conclusions.
The Last Farewell (original air date: February 6, 1984)
Charles and Caroline return to Walnut Grove to learn that somebody else owns the town and wants everyone to leave Walnut Grove. The townspeople decide that the person can keep the land but they own the town. Allison Arngrim (Nellie Olson on the original series) has a cameo as a telephone operator.
Bless All The Dear Children (original air date: December 17, 1984)
This was actually a Christmas-themed movie. (Didn't "Little House On The Prairie" always have the best Christmas episodes?) Laura and Almanzo's baby daughter Rose is kidnapped while they are Christmas shopping.
Michael Landon was a genius and no one compares to the very high standards that he always set!
One Good, and Two Great "Movies" Makes This Set a Treasure
This boxed set includes two of my all-time favorite Little House films. There's a big reason why the final season of Little House just didn't have the same feel as the all of the ones before it. Even though the series was about Laura Ingalls Wilder, the true pivotal character has always been Charles. Michael Landon created one of the most memorable characters in television history. When he left the show during the final season, it was like a hole was left behind and unable to be filled. Little House simply wasn't the same.
Thankfully, however, Michael Landon reprises his role in two of these final movies that ended the series so wonderfully.
The first film, "Bless All the Dear Children," is okay at best. It is not a great installment. While the premise is good, (Rose is kidnapped by an emotionally disturbed woman while Laura and Almanzo are Christmas shopping), it simply isn't carried off well. This is supposed to be December in Minnesota, and yet everyone is dressed like it's southern California (where the series was filmed). All other Christmas episodes featured snow and cold weather to make the location more realistic. There are also some parts of the story that just don't add up very well. The final confrontation with the kidnapper is simply too easy and unrealistic. The part with the "star" over where the little boy is sleeping is also too big of a leap. It was a valiant try.
Second we have my all-time favorite episode/feature: "Look Back to Yesterday." This episode features Albert and Charles returning to Walnut Grove, initially as Charles' job as a new shipping manager sends him to help the people of Walnut Grove find a way to compete with the larger farms of the area. The trip turns into a nightmare when Charles discovers that Albert is dying of a deadly disease. I remember this episode shocking everyone, as it was rare that a major character like Albert was being "killed off." It's a true Little House tear-jerker, with Albert fulfilling some of his last dreams. Michael Landon simply knew how to get the most out of a scene and the most out of his actors. This is vintage Little House at its finest! The final climb of the mountain by Albert, Laura, and the school kids is one of the most memorable scenes in the series' history. Albert and Laura were always very close characters in the series, and Landon knew to focus a good portion of the story on the relationship between these two characters.
Finally, we get to the very last episode "The Last Farewell," in which a land prospector decides to take over the town, forcing the citizens of Walnut Grove into a fight they can't possibly win. Karen Grassle reprises her role as Caroline Ingalls as she and Charles head back to Walnut Grove for a visit and find themselves right in the middle of the takeover. The story starts off light and ends in true sentimental fashion. The final fifteen minutes will make even the hardest heart melt as we witness the final fate of Walnut Grove.
The series had definitely done its best for nearly 9+ seasons. With Michael Landon at the helm and performing in the last two episodes, he made sure that Little House ended the best way possible. Any true Little House fan can't be disappointed with this set. I had been looking forward to the release of these television movies for years, and I was so happy when they finally came out.










