PartyOfOne
09-15-2008, 08:13 PM
As many of you know, all of the episodes of DVD were filmed in black and white. However, in DVD's last season (1965-1966) the vast majority of CBS's programs began filming and broadcasting in color. Does anyone know why this didn't happen with DVD? Was it to maintain continuity with the previous 4 seasons?
LauraNamesake
09-15-2008, 09:29 PM
I think so. I like them in black&white. And actually the actors looked different in color than in black & white, so maybe that made a difference.
Schmoopie
09-16-2008, 04:13 AM
Really? I thought they were all black and white. It's weird but black and white shows just seem to "lose" something (their nostalgia, perhaps?) when they start being filmed in color.
Andrea
MickeyMac
09-16-2008, 01:11 PM
There is also the good possibility that CBS lost all of the color episodes and had to use the black and white kinescopes as back up. This happened over at NBC with Hullabaloo(only three color episodes of that show survive), and at ABC with Where The Action Is, all the color episodes of that show have been long gone.
LauraNamesake
09-16-2008, 04:37 PM
Really? I thought they were all black and white. It's weird but black and white shows just seem to "lose" something (their nostalgia, perhaps?) when they start being filmed in color.
Andrea
They were all filmed in B&W.
SpunkiiMonkii7078
09-16-2008, 05:40 PM
I like the show being only in black and white. While a sixth season being in color would have been interesting, for me it would just lose some of the magic.
Benno123
09-16-2008, 07:33 PM
I believe that the series was filmed in b&w because the budget per episode for color filmed episodes was higher than b&w. Had the series stayed on the air longer than there is a good chance the show would have been filmed in color because it wasn't soon after the show left that CBS started broadcasting in color all of the time.
Lucille Ball filmed the second season and on of The Lucy Show in color, though it aired in b&w until the 4th season because of rerun value.
Benno123
09-17-2008, 06:03 AM
On page 262 of the Official Dick Van Dyke Show Book it says that Carl Reiner and Sheldon Leonard thought of producing the DVD Show in color as early as the third season, but it would add $7000 per episode to the budget. They decided not to go to color and continue in b&w. Had the series moved on to a 6th season, the show may have been produced in color. Somewhere on that page it quotes Leonard saying "the show could have lasted five more years in color!"
LauraNamesake
09-17-2008, 05:41 PM
On page 262 of the Official Dick Van Dyke Show Book it says that Carl Reiner and Sheldon Leonard thought of producing the DVD Show in color as early as the third season, but it would add $7000 per episode to the budget. They decided not to go to color and continue in b&w. Had the series moved on to a 6th season, the show may have been produced in color. Somewhere on that page it quotes Leonard saying "the show could have lasted five more years in color!"
Funny you mention that because I was just reading into it in my copy!!
treky
09-26-2008, 03:58 AM
I also like it in black and white. I'm glad they didn't do it in color.
jehobden
04-19-2009, 04:06 AM
As many of you know, all of the episodes of DVD were filmed in black and white. However, in DVD's last season (1965-1966) the vast majority of CBS's programs began filming and broadcasting in color. Does anyone know why this didn't happen with DVD? Was it to maintain continuity with the previous 4 seasons?
I suspect that all of the reasons mentioned here factored into the decision to stay in B&W. Another reason could be that a switch to color would have meant filming a new opening sequence of some sort, as well, since there was no colorization back then. Shows like Andy Griffith, Beverly Hillbillies, and Petticoat Junction had to refilm basically the same opening sequences as had been done in B&W in color.
Only 3 CBS sitcoms remained in B&W for the 1965-66 season, and none of them went on to 1966-67. They were DVD, The Munsters, and The Smothers Brothers Show. In another coincidence, I have seen all three of these on Nick at Nite, back when it was a great network for classic tv shows.