Jude The Obscure
10-09-2008, 01:16 PM
I just got season one on DVD (thank you, Pepsi) and I am really enjoying these episodes again--even more so than when I was a kid or in reruns. I am now noticing more things with a fine tooth comb, per se. For instance in the first episode, "All the Way", we get to see a full exterior restaurant that was called "Arthur's Restaurant", that I'm sure was some real life restaurant Paramount used for this first episode (second pilot). It actually had a full operational coffee shop in the front (as opposed to the small take out window front later seen as "Arnold's"). I'm sure Paramount, when the series was ordered, built "Arnold's" based on the "Arthur's" real layout, but did it on a smaller scale. Even Potsie, a couple of episodes later("Richie's Cup Runneth Over") referred to the owner as "Arthur", even though by that time, the exterior shots clearly said "Arnold's".
As for character observations, Richie was the naive good All American teen with a natural curiosity for seeking the wild side. Potsie was the supposedly more sophisticated wiser, wordly best friend, who often pretended to know more than he actually did. Still I would take this Potsie over the later evolved dumb as a brick character Potsie became. Joannie was the typical smart aleck younger sister and Chuck was pretty much the non-entity he always was on the series (the writers seemed on intent on never really developing him as a true character from the start).
Fonzie was simply that mysterious cool popular guy everyone wanted to have on their side for approval, before they turned him into Fonzie, THE SUPERHERO.
I loved the sets--they were real and you felt you were actually in a house, actually at a drive-in, at a garage.....the single camera concept worked great and it's a shame the need to turn this into a multi camera, live before a studio audience sitcom , in order to take advantage of the growing ratings.
Another thing I noticed--in the Cunningham garage scenes, there is a fence blocking what would become the stairway to the garage apartment (I'm sure the garage apartment never existed, until the writers felt the need to have Fonzie's presence in every episode, so hence, the set was redesigned from that point of view).
We get to see bedrooms--actual bedrooms and the bathroom. The set redesign for the studio audience severely limited access to full view of the Cunningham house and we rarely, if ever, got to see Howard and Marion in their bedroom, or even Richie's room, if I recall.
There will be more thoughts as I watch more of the DVD set.
As for character observations, Richie was the naive good All American teen with a natural curiosity for seeking the wild side. Potsie was the supposedly more sophisticated wiser, wordly best friend, who often pretended to know more than he actually did. Still I would take this Potsie over the later evolved dumb as a brick character Potsie became. Joannie was the typical smart aleck younger sister and Chuck was pretty much the non-entity he always was on the series (the writers seemed on intent on never really developing him as a true character from the start).
Fonzie was simply that mysterious cool popular guy everyone wanted to have on their side for approval, before they turned him into Fonzie, THE SUPERHERO.
I loved the sets--they were real and you felt you were actually in a house, actually at a drive-in, at a garage.....the single camera concept worked great and it's a shame the need to turn this into a multi camera, live before a studio audience sitcom , in order to take advantage of the growing ratings.
Another thing I noticed--in the Cunningham garage scenes, there is a fence blocking what would become the stairway to the garage apartment (I'm sure the garage apartment never existed, until the writers felt the need to have Fonzie's presence in every episode, so hence, the set was redesigned from that point of view).
We get to see bedrooms--actual bedrooms and the bathroom. The set redesign for the studio audience severely limited access to full view of the Cunningham house and we rarely, if ever, got to see Howard and Marion in their bedroom, or even Richie's room, if I recall.
There will be more thoughts as I watch more of the DVD set.