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Rating: Summary: Angry puppets and giant cakes of soap Review: All that and more can be yours if your order this disc today!Vol. 2 of the Educational Archives series is an entertaining glimpse back to much simpler times when educators and parents felt that kids learned lessons in morality best when instructed by giant soap bars, talking chalk drawings, omniscient narrators, and Mike Wallace. This collection of films contains a lot of classic education winners: Lunchroom Manners features the puppet depot, Mr. Bungle, and Shy Guy showcases a very young Dick York, who went on to bigger and better things. I adore this disc, and hope there are many more to come in the series. As a collector of 16 mm prints, I appreciate the opportunity to have some of these rarer titles. As an archivist and popular culture scholar, I can't express how strongly I feel about why sources why these should be documented and preserved for many generations to enjoy. These "hokey" films are in important part of the history of the culture of both adolescents and teenagers in the U.S.
Rating: Summary: Why doesn't Cathy eat breakfast? Review: Great DVD! Most of the films are funny and interesting. A couple of lame ones tossed in there, too, unfortunately. (4 stars vs. 5 star ratings). This DVD features "Soapy the Germ Fighter," "Why Vandalism?" and my favorite, "Why doesn't Cathy eat breakfast?" I can't wait for more to come out! Bring us more 60s and 70s features! Wooooooooo!
Rating: Summary: Why doesn't Cathy eat breakfast? Review: Great DVD! Most of the films are funny and interesting. A couple of lame ones tossed in there, too, unfortunately. (4 stars vs. 5 star ratings). This DVD features "Soapy the Germ Fighter," "Why Vandalism?" and my favorite, "Why doesn't Cathy eat breakfast?" I can't wait for more to come out! Bring us more 60s and 70s features! Wooooooooo!
Rating: Summary: Those Old School Films of Mine Review: I own all four of the "Educational Archives" DVDs, and so far, Volume 2 is my favorite. I love "Lunchroom Manners" and "Soapy the Germ Fighter" best of all. Oh, and the one about Chalky -- that's a keeper. "Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast?" really takes me back to my own elementary school days, because our teacher actually SHOWED us that bizarre little film as part of a "good nutrition" unit. I love the ending -- "STOP PROJECTOR; DISCUSS MOVIE." Wouldn't it be great if more movies ended like that? [...]
Rating: Summary: My favorite of the "Educational Archives" series Review: I own all four of the "Educational Archives" DVDs, and so far, Volume 2 is my favorite. I love "Lunchroom Manners" and "Soapy the Germ Fighter" best of all. Oh, and the one about Chalky -- that's a keeper. "Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast?" really takes me back to my own elementary school days, because our teacher actually SHOWED us that bizarre little film as part of a "good nutrition" unit. I love the ending -- "STOP PROJECTOR; DISCUSS MOVIE." Wouldn't it be great if more movies ended like that? [...]
Rating: Summary: Those Old School Films of Mine Review: I'm watching "Social Engineering 101." The DVDs arrived today, and they are a HOOT. So far I?ve seen: "School of the Living Dead" - 1960 Strangely shaped children stagger through the world's most terrifying lunch break, as staring adults serve unidentifiable food stuffs. Watch as the scary minions pick at themselves and obsessively collect and arrange used milk cartons, as a lone fly scurries across a freshly cleaned table. Very Bergman; very disturbing. "Don't Drop the Soap" - 19?? Mike's Xstacy kicks in just at bedtime, opening the door for one of Satan's minions. A foppishly dressed bar of soap attempts to recruit Mike to the gay underworld, tempting him with visions of strapping, sweaty cowboys. Sign me up! "Honor Thy Father" - 1950 Tommy attempts to break through sexual stereotypes by taking up both cleaning and construction. Tommy's parents are thrilled, and pay him to continue his chores in a serf-like role. We know Tommy these days as Tommy Tune. "Bewitched, Bothered, Besmirched" - 1947 Samantha's future husband, Dick "Darrin" York, is fed a line by his old dad, encouraged to emulate the sassy, select, snobbish elite at his new school. Dick gravitates towards the boys and girls with the worst possible hairdos and largest noses, which seems to decrease the size of his ears. The other students ignore him as often as possible because of his internal dialogue, which they can hear, and which terrifies them all. They eventually capitulate when he threatens them with his "oscillator." "Groovy Kathy, Anorexic" - 196? Educational films' first ethnic star has a dirty little secret...she won't eat. Even the announcer from the Chicago Dairy Council can't tempt her with hypnotic visions of ice cream or tacos for breakfast. What's wrong with this girl? Lord knows we've tried! "Squealer" - 1951 Do-gooders ruin everyone's fun by turning in high-spirited teens to the police. Even worse, one is expected to play stool pigeon and turn in the rest of his pals! In this early version of "Scared Straight", we can tell Harry is walking a fine line between good and evil: He has big hair, but it's not greasy. A shyster takes him to his swinging bachelor pad with blonde hi-fi. Tell, Harry, tell! "Emotion 10, Looks 3" - 1954 Amateur thespians and spooky children chew up the scenery when asked to express "emotion." Abandoned babies, over-crowded classrooms, and hormone-crazed adolescents are only a few of the horrors faced in the brave new world of the atomic age. Let's take a little blue pill called "Compoz." I think that's all I can handle for one evening. You'll weep from laughing. Good night.
Rating: Summary: "They All Eat Chocolate Ice Cream Cones!!!" Review: It totally rules!! "Why Vandalism?" is particularly amazing. "Shy Guy" is good because it has a very young Dick York. Actually, I recognized a few of these from Nick at Nite about 10 years ago...they used to show "The Patty Duke Show" and "Dobie Gillis" and all that, and in between they'd show snippets of old classroom films!!! Man, those were the days. The kid in "Soapy The Germ Fighter" kind of looks like a dirty, young male adolescent Bjork ..."Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast?" is WAY too short. I'd pay [price] for 2 hours of just her in her gloriously funky room. When I finally got 'round to the final film, "The Outsider", I got all giddy; after all, the last filmstrip in "Vol I: Sex & Drugs" was the brilliant "The ABC's of Sex Ed For Trainables." . Once again, Skip does not disappoint! This film is the most brilliantly melodramatic portrayal of basic young girl blues I have ever seen. Thank goodness Susan Jane's mother intervenes, before she has a total mental breakdown! I can't wait until I get "On The Job"!!!!!!!!!
Rating: Summary: "They All Eat Chocolate Ice Cream Cones!!!" Review: It totally rules!! "Why Vandalism?" is particularly amazing. "Shy Guy" is good because it has a very young Dick York. Actually, I recognized a few of these from Nick at Nite about 10 years ago...they used to show "The Patty Duke Show" and "Dobie Gillis" and all that, and in between they'd show snippets of old classroom films!!! Man, those were the days. The kid in "Soapy The Germ Fighter" kind of looks like a dirty, young male adolescent Bjork ..."Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast?" is WAY too short. I'd pay [price] for 2 hours of just her in her gloriously funky room. When I finally got 'round to the final film, "The Outsider", I got all giddy; after all, the last filmstrip in "Vol I: Sex & Drugs" was the brilliant "The ABC's of Sex Ed For Trainables." . Once again, Skip does not disappoint! This film is the most brilliantly melodramatic portrayal of basic young girl blues I have ever seen. Thank goodness Susan Jane's mother intervenes, before she has a total mental breakdown! I can't wait until I get "On The Job"!!!!!!!!!
Rating: Summary: Useful background fodder for your cocktail party Review: Oooh. This is why my mom and dad twitch when you say the words "high" and "school" in the same sentence. (Perhaps that's just because I used it in the context, "Mom, I'm thinking about dropping out of SCHOOL so I can spend more time getting HIGH." Huh. Huh-huh-huh.) The aptly named Social Engineering 101 has a collection that spans a few eras and awkwardly reflects each of them via the wonder of ... EDUCATIONAL FILMS! From the '50s "Leave It To Beaver" style "Shy Guy" starring a very young Dick York (check out the unintentional hilarity you get when you watch this segment fully aware of Dick's ... erm ... preferred masculine company! It takes on a whole different meaning!!) to the '70s "Why Doesn't Cathy Eat Breakfast?" (We never learn why-it just amounts to a montage of food that's trippier than anything out of "Jesus Christ Superstar.") In case you were concerned that the digital re-mastering of these fine pieces would rob them of the pops and crackles you fondly recall from those school days, school days ... fear not. They're left perfectly intact as exemplefied by "Manners In School." (That's the one where the little boy learns all about manners from an animated character on the chalkboard named ... guh-huh-huh.. you guessed it! Chalky! Oh, and Chalky is scaaaaary! But the little kid seems unphased by his new one-dimensional hallucinatory rule-making buddy.) You're probably thinking, "That's all fine and dandy, but what would I *DO* with this disc?" Well, it makes for wonderful cocktail party discussions and can also be used to illustrate just how close our society has come to "1984" style social programming. I especially loved the way the narrator barks, "Welcome to the world, young man!" in the shot of the newborn baby in the short "Personality & Emotions." That would've sent me back to the womb, screaming. Check out how far our general understandings of psychology have come! Wheee!
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