
ainsi que sur Itunes en VOD HD (vraisemblablement un upscale du SD, je me suis fait avoir) - que je vais graver sur un Bluray-r - avec VF et VO:

Modérateurs : Karen, savoy1, DeVilDead Team
C'est celui avec le doublage qui tue?comte vonkrolock a écrit :A la fnac aujourd'hui
à 9,99€ cette vieille série des 70-80s un intégrale de 34 épisodes répartie sur 2 DVD
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Non s'est le doublage d'époque (sur ton extrait sa l'air d'être un truc récent) j'ai juste vu un épisode et sa a l'air beaucoup moins naze que cette odieux remixe faudrait que tu me précise quel épisode s'est pour que je puisse faire la différence.Roderick Usher a écrit :C'est celui avec le doublage qui tue?comte vonkrolock a écrit :A la fnac aujourd'hui
à 9,99€ cette vieille série des 70-80s un intégrale de 34 épisodes répartie sur 2 DVD
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BCLZ8Ik-OA[/youtube]
Celle-la, bibi l'attend de pied ferme.Mais quand vont-ils nous sortir la série avec Adam West !!!
Bibi pense que ce serait plus simple de faire un film (de tribunal) sur les problemes juridiques d'une eventuelle sortie que de sortir la serie en elle-meme...In January 2014, Conan O'Brien posted on his Twitter account, and Warner Bros. later confirmed, that Warner Bros. would release an official DVD box set of the complete series sometime in 2014.[17]
On April 10, 2014, the website tvshowsondvd.com quoted Burt Ward in saying that Warner Bros. would release the complete series in late November 2014 in time for the holiday season, and that he and Adam West were doing special features for the release.
Prior to the announcement, there were multiple conflicting reports for the reason the series had not been released officially. These included:
Disagreement between DC Comics, owners of the Batman character, after DC's sister/parent company Warner Bros. took over DC in 1969. Warner Bros. could also be involved, as well as 20th Century Fox, owners of the program itself.[notes 4]
Greenway/ABC/Fox rights issues. The Batman series was conceived as an equal partnership between William Dozier's Greenway Productions and Fox in 1964, before Fox entered into a separate agreement with ABC to produce the series in 1965. With three companies involved almost from the outset, there is some speculation that these rights are tangled even before the DC Comics character ownership rights are to be considered. Moreover:
In 2006, Deborah Dozier Potter, "the successor-in-interest to Greenway Productions" sued Fox for allegedly withholding monies under the Fox/ABC agreement.[18][19] Dozier Potter further claimed that this came to her attention when, in March 2005, "she considered releasing the series on DVD", implying that (from her perspective at least) Greenway/Dozier Potter has some say in the matter of potential DVD release of the series. The case was resolved/dismissed in November 2007. In February 2005, John Stacks had approached Deborah Dozier Potter to market the series on DVD. There were many offers and lots of interest in the release of the series, as can be read in Joel Eisner's The Official Batbook Revised Bat Edition 2008.[notes 5]
Other complications/rights issues:
Christopher D. Heer, writing at the "1966 Batman Message Board", clarified a quote by moderator Lee Kirkham, noting that there will likely be the need for complicated deals regarding cameos, since "...at least some of the cameos were done as uncredited, unpaid walk-ons – which means that Fox does NOT have home video clearances for them. Either those scenes would have to be cut or an agreement reached with the actors."[20]
Kirkham's initial quote also noted that, alongside music clearance issues, there could also be problems over some of the costumes, and the original Batmobile:
"It may surprise you, but then there are also rights issues concerning the design of the unique Batmobile design used in the show, and possibly a separate issue regarding some of the costumes as well!"[21]
The series, under the Fox/ABC deal, is still in syndication, and regularly shown on a number of channels around the world, currently appearing in the United States on Me-TV. Until 2014, only the 1966 feature film was available on DVD from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment for non-broadcast viewing in North America. This affected the 2003 television movie reunion Return to the Batcave: The Misadventures of Adam and Burt, also released to DVD, which was able to make use of footage only from the 1966 movie.
With Batman being unavailable for home-video release until 2014, an unusual situation occurred in which material that would be considered DVD featurettes was released separately. In 2004, Image Entertainment released Holy Batmania, a two-DVD set that included documentaries on the making of the series, as well as rare footage such as the original screen tests of the cast and Lyle Waggoner.[22] In 2008, Adam West released a privately issued DVD with the tongue-in-cheek title Adam West Naked for which he recorded anecdotes regarding all 120 episodes of the series.[23] In 2013 PBS aired aired an episode of Pioneers of Television called "Superheroes" that featured interviews with Adam West and Burt Ward, and talked about the 1960s TV series. It was released on DVD March 11, 2013.
Also in 2013, PBS produced and transmitted a documentary titled Superheroes: A Never-Ending Battle. This documentary talked a little bit about the series and included an interview with Adam West.