8.5 | / 10 |
Users | 5.0 | |
Reviewer | 5.0 | |
Overall | 5.0 |
What you are, what you want, what you love doesn't matter. It's all about how you sell it. Mad Men delves into the lives, loves and ambitions of a group of ruthlessly competitive men and women working in a 1960s advertising agency. Set on and around Madison Avenue - home of New York's ad agencies at the time, and the "Mad" of the title - the series was created by Sopranos writer Matthew Weiner and has gained rave reviews in the US. The series revolves around the complicated world of Don Draper, the biggest ad man (and ladies' man) in the business, and his colleagues at the Sterling Cooper Advertising Agency. As Don makes the plays in the boardroom and the bedroom, he struggles to stay a step ahead of the rapidly changing times and the young executives nipping at his heels.
Starring: Jon Hamm, January Jones, Elisabeth Moss, Vincent Kartheiser, Christina HendricksDrama | 100% |
Period | 57% |
Dark humor | 44% |
History | 37% |
Romance | 31% |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.78:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English, English SDH, Spanish
50GB Blu-ray Disc
Three-disc set (3 BDs)
Region free
Movie | 5.0 | |
Video | 5.0 | |
Audio | 4.0 | |
Extras | 4.0 | |
Overall | 5.0 |
Interview Magazine happened to be the one and only piece of reading material on my naturopath’s waiting room end table a week or so ago when I had a check up visit. I had never opened the magazine previously, and so had no idea what to expect. I was immediately assaulted by some of the frankly most shocking and ugliest looking advertisements I had ever seen, most for supposedly high fashion items. These were layouts full of “heroin chic” models, most with such heavy black eye makeup they resembled raccoons. Most of them sported absolutely bizarre hair styles, frizzed and shaped into all sorts of outlandish shapes, and a great many of them wore virtually nothing, despite many of the ads ostensibly being for clothes. I silently wondered to myself what future generations would think of the 2010 era if they happened upon this issue and glanced through the ads. Of course that same “time capsule” mentality is applicable to any era.
I used to collect Saturday Evening Post magazines, and frequently would roar with laughter from ads from the first decade of the 20th century which featured such unforgettable tag lines as “The first toilet tissue guaranteed not to have splinters!” The Post in fact remains a treasure trove of vintage advertising, especially for the early 1960’s timeline. If you’ve never read Otto Friedrich’s absolutely riveting tale of corporate intrigue at the Curtis Publishing Company (owner of the Post), Decline and Fall, I highly recommend it. His chapters dealing with the radical overhaul of the Post in the early 1960’s to attract more ad dollars and a younger demographic read like a primer for the office machinations on display throughout much of Mad Men, the vaunted AMC series dealing with the personal and professional lives of the advertising personnel at the fictional Sterling Cooper Agency in New York City. The first two seasons of the series took us from circa 1960 to the end of 1962, and this third season picks up in 1963, an era already fraught with change, much of it still subliminal. That subtext was about to be thrust into full consciousness with the seminal events leading up to the assassination of John F. Kennedy, a plot arc the third season brilliantly exploits as various characters come to grips with their own secrets and issues.
Jon Hamm as the enigmatic Don Draper.
To put it simply, there is no finer looking series on television right now than Mad Men. Unfortunately, my satellite service does not include AMC HD (yet, anyway), so watching these episodes in full 1080p glory (yep, 1080p, despite their television heritage), via an AVC encode, the glories of the 1.78:1 image are truly spectacular. This is a series which revels in production and costume design and the wonderful palette of 1963 is fully on display throughout all of this season. The finely tailored suits of the men and often elegant apparel of the women reveal a host of fine details, so that you feel at times you can almost reach out and touch the very fabrics they're wearing. The sometimes muted pastel colors of the offices and backgrounds are then shattered, figuratively speaking, by unbelievably bold primary colors which dance across the screen, but never devolve into blooming. I noticed absolutely no artifacting throughout this season, and constrast and black levels remain very strong throughout. If you want to see just how excellent a "mere" television series can look, look no further than this sterling (and cooper?) Blu-ray release of Mad Men: Season Three.
Mad Men's DTS HD-MA 5.1 mix is perfectly wonderful, though surround channels are really rather sparsely utilized throughout the series. This is of course to be expected in a show that is almost entirely indoors, and which frequently plays out in relatively intimate scenes between just a few actors. That said, there's nice attention paid to directionality in dialogue sequences, and that dialogue is always crisp and clear and completely easy to hear. The frequently used source music does fill out the surround channels when it's utilized, and some of the outdoor Manhattan scenes have some nice ambient moments. This is simply not a show that calls for knock your socks off aural hyperbole, so don't approach the show with a summer blockbuster mentality. What is here is a very finely detailed and nuanced soundtrack that is certainly heads and shoulders above most series television's rather paltry efforts.
Mad Men: Season Three follows in its first two seasons' footsteps by offering a plethora of excellent extras. Each of the episodes has at least one commentary, and several have two. I frankly did not have time to listen to each and every commentary in full, wanting to get this review up sometime before the end of 2010. I did spot check almost all of them, and listened in full to several featuring Matthew Weiner. The Weiner commentaries are especially interesting, as he discusses his intentions for the show and the historical background of many of the events playing out throughout this season. All three discs also offer at least one bonus featurette. The extras include:
Disc One
Commentaries:
"Out of Town": 1) Vincent Kartheiser, Aaron Staton, Bryan Batt, Rich Sommer
2) Matthew Weiner, Phil Abraham, David Carbonara
"Love Among the Ruins": Matthew Weiner, Elisabeth Moss, Michael Gladis, Jared Harris
"My Old Kentucky Home": 1) Elisabeth Moss, Janie Bryant
2) Matthew Weiner, Dahvi Waller
"The Arrangement": Matthew Wiener, Kiernan Shipka, Ryan Cutrona
"The Fog": Matthew Weiner, Dan Bishop, Phil Abraham
Supplement:
Mad Men Illustrated (14:01) looks at the work of the wonderfully named Dyna Moe, whose illustrations mimic the opening title graphics look of Mad Men.
Disc Two
Commentaries:
"Guy Walks Into an Advertising Agency": 1) Christina Hendricks, Jared Harris
2) Matthew Weiner, Lesli Linka Glatter
"Seven Twenty Three": 1) Andre and Maria Jacquemetton
2) Matthew Weiner, Robert Morse, Josh Weltman, Bob Levinson
"Souvenir": Matthew Weiner, Vincent Kartheiser, Lisa Albert
"Wee Small Hours": 1) Jon Hamm, Bryan Batt, Chelcie Ross
2) Matthew Weiner, Scott Hornbacher
Supplements:
Clearing the Air: The History of Cigarette Advertising is split into two parts, Part 1 running 25:28 and Part 2 19:58. As any aficionado of this series will tell you, smoking occurs virtually nonstop by almost all of the characters, and this fascinating documentary ties that all in to the history of ads for tobacco products.
Flashback 1963 is an interesting photo gallery which can be accessed via either a "Play All" mode or an "Interactive" mode which allows the viewer an overview of images from which to select.
Disc Three
Commentaries:
"The Color Blue": 1) Elisabeth Moss, Michael Gladis, Jared Harris
2) Matthew Weiner, Mike Uppendahl
"The Gypsy and the Hobo": 1) Christina Hendricks, John Slattery, Jennifer Getzinger
2) Jon Hamm, Matthew Weiner
"The Grown-Ups": 1) Vincent Kartheiser, Alison Brie, John Slattery
2) Matthew Weiner, Blake McCormick, Brett Johnson
"Shut the Door. Have a Seat.": 1) Jon Hamm, Robert Morse, John Slattery
2) Matthew Weiner, Erin Levy
Supplements:
Medgar Evers: An Unsung Hero runs over 70 minutes, split into two parts, and details the pioneering efforts of this largely forgotten civil rights hero.
We Shall Overcome: The March on Washington (16:56) chronicles the epochal events of the summer of 1963, culminating in Martin Luther King's famous "I have a dream" speech.
Sometimes we lowly (if not especially humble) critics are actually right (I know, I know, hard to believe). Mad Men really does deserve much more attention from the public at large for its brilliantly realized recreation of an era that really is not so distant, despite seeming awfully archaic to modern eyes and ears at times. With possibly the strongest production design in current television, and unerringly strong work from a crackerjack ensemble, Mad Men is riveting television. This Blu-ray release of the Third Season will hopefully attract a bevy of new fans to the show, while keeping its current aficionados completely satisfied. And that ain't no advertising hype.
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