The Lions - Up Close And Personal [2001] [DVD]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #11509 in DVD
- Released on: 2002-03-25
- Rating: Exempt
- Format: PAL
- Original language: English
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 180 minutes
Editorial Reviews
DVD Description
The groundbreaking sports documentary - life with the Lions Down Under. This programme provides the most intimate, blow-by-blow account of life on tour ever seen over three incredible hours of footage. Plus extras.
Special Features
English
Region 2
Interactive Menus
Scene Selection
Speeches
Social Activities
Funniest Moments
Willie John McBride Speech
Final Analysis
Synopsis
Fly-on-the-wall look at the Lions' long awaited tour of Australia. It starts the week before the beginning of the tour in the UK and follows all of the action on and off the pitch in Australia.
Customer Reviews
Review of Up Close and Personal 2001
A truly extraordinary DVD. This DVD is over 3 hours long and shows all the behind-the-scnes footage of this infamous Lions tour of Australia. This includes extended highlights of the three tests and the other matches on the tour and the repercussions of the fallout from Matt Dawson's article. It also has the lighter moments of training, Austin healy's antics and the boys at leisure. It includes the team talks from Graham Henry, Martin Johnson and Keith Wood, and the joy and pain of the players as they beat Australia only to lose the series.
I absoluely loved this. Perfect for showing all the rugby and all the politics behind it. You get to be a fly-on-the-wall to discussions between Henry and Lineham on who to pick and who to leave out; the players' responses to team selections and strategy and excerpts from the boys training and pre-and post-match responses.
Though this tour was now almost 2 years ago, i only bought it recently and found it not only a fascinating reminder of the tour. It was also very funny and provides an amazing insight into the psyche of some of the current crop. This includes Martin Johnson's extraordinary impact as team leader on the other members of the team (he really is an enduring inspiration to them)and the total inability of the training staff to get jonny wilkinson off the pitch from practicing his kicking.
I would recommend this to anyone without hesitation.
Disappointed.
Having been as impressed as I was with "Living with Lions" I thought that the internal battles and politics of the 2001 tour would culminate in a fantastic documentary. I had also read the articles written by Matt Dawson and Austin Healey and was fascinated in what might turn up...
Unfortunately I was deeply disappointed by the main documentary. It became very obvious very quickly that the senior members of the party were not interested in being filmed - probably because of the huge rifts forming in the group - and that certain members of the group, namely Austin Healey, were happy to completely hog the camera and spoil what could, ultimately, have been a far more revealing insight into what really happened.
The 2001 Lions were, unquestionably, man for man better than the Australians and it would be a very stupid or very patriotic person that would say otherwise. I was looking forward to the psychology of a team lead by a coach that just wasn’t liked – I mean, how could they lose? - and all I got was Austin Healey behaving like a fool on screen. He wasn’t even a major player on the tour so why use so much footage of him? Possibly just to pad the main programme out to the required length? This was obviously going to be the last Lions tour for some of the modern day greats – Herculean men like Keith Wood and Martin Johnson. Austin Healey? – Give me a break.
The beauty of “Living with Lions” was that the original documentary had been such a masterpiece of television making.
So why not one star? Well there is a great deal of other footage included with the original programme and some of it easily justifies the money. And, at the end of the day, this was an historic event in many more ways than one with some truly classic moments in it.
A shame – this package really could have been up there.
Oh, and Austin Healey is in it.
Terrible editing makes for a frustrating viewing.
I was really delighted how quickly this DVD arrived at my home, after barely 36 hours after order. I was really looking forward to watching some high level rugby tied in with a behind the scenes coverage of the Lions tour of 2001.
This first review on this site, claims, that the DVD includes extended highlights from all 3 tests. Well this person must have a different copy to the version i received. If i had to guess, i would rekon you get around 25 minutes of actual rugby footage from a DVD lasting 3 hours.
The warm up games, v the likes of, NSW, ACT Brumbies, Western Australia are almost covered in the same length (rugby coverage) as the actual test matches.
When its time for the BIG test matches, i was surprised that the action just began. No lineup is shown, and no real highlights are shown, with the exception of the actual tries. Conversions are sometimes shown, as is the case of penalties. The frustrating thing is...when the highlights are shown of a try, the footage switches to the coaches or players willing them to get to the try line. Its so frustrating. Just let us watch the action unfold. The first test footage lasts about 2 minutes, with the second test about 3 minutes. You just wish time and time again, that you could watch some actual rugby. You really only get to see, the tries finished off.
The final test, gets more rugby coverage but again, conversions are not shown, you have to look at the score to see if they went over, and some pens are not shown. Its a real disapointment. I remember watching the game live, and the atmosphere as Waltzing Matilda was sung after the anthems, but its completely ignored. Once again the coverage is bare, important penalties conceded are not reviewed, and you seem to spend an annoying amount of time watching the little rugby you get to see 1/4 screen size, for god knows what reason.
The first 2 hours i was really enjoying this DVD. I didn;t mind not seeing much rugby action before the 3 tests, cos i was under the impression, they would show you atleast 20mins of highlights per test. But i was wrong.
If your thinking of buying this dvd to remind yourself of the rugby played in the 2001 tour, then you wont find it on this dvd. What you will find is, lots of training, speeches and behind the scenes antics. All good fun and enjoyable, but shouldn;t this dvd which is 3 hours long, show more than 20 minutes of rugby?
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