Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts

The Right and Wrong Fortunes of War

So I've been slowly replacing some of my US DVDs of UK programs... Not all of them arbitrarily, mind you.  I've just been trying to find the ones that are actually better overseas: be it longer cuts (Masterpiece Theater had a bad habit of trimming scenes down for American television), exclusive special features or just better PAL to NTSC transfers.  The problem is, DVDCompare often helps with the extras, but otherwise there's rarely information online detailing the differences between international editions, and when there is, you wind up having to trust one random Amazon reviewer or an ancient post from the IMDB boards.  So there's a lot of rolling the dice, and so far I've been lucky.  In fact, just recently, I landed a great on one I should've bought years ago.
Fortunes of War may go down in history as the first pairing of frequent collaborators and once actually married couple Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson, but it's so much more than that.  The word "epic" gets thrown around a little too often, but this 1987 series truly earns it.  It's a seven-episode adaptation of Olivia Manning's semi-autobiographical series of novels about a college professor and his wife traveling to and from the second World War.  The series is filmed in their authentic locations around Yugoslavia/ Romania, Greece and Egypt.  I couldn't help thinking about those awful shots of Branagh and co. standing around in front of phony pyramids for his latest production of Death On the Nile, while watching Ken and Emma actually climbing the very real pyramids in this.  There are truly impressive battle scenes with big explosions and lots of soldiers operating major military equipment.  But that appears quite sporadically, because Fortunes is really about a single marriage trying to survive the horrors of war, and the friends they meet and lose along the way.
This was major event programming when it aired in the 80s, with something like nine BAFTA noms and three wins (Thompson's first).  Rupert Graves gets third billing on all the packaging, and he's great, but he doesn't even turn up until episode 5.  It's Ronald Pickup who really steals the show as the expatriate Prince Yakimov, but the entire cast is spot-on with one brilliant character after another, including actor/writer Alan Bennett as the detestable Lord Pinkrose.  It has a subtle but effective little score.  And thanks both to Manning and adapter Alan Plater, it's sharply written, and apart from one trite plot device in the last act, heartfelt without being sentimental.  And in fairness to Manning, it could be what actually happened to her and her husband in real life. 
I can still remember waiting, watching websites and wondering when Fortunes of War would ever come out on DVD.  It finally did in 2005 as a flipper-disc from Warner Bros and BBC Video.  And since no one's ever seen fit to restore it to HD, that's been my copy for all these years.  But it's never been terribly satisfying.  So this winter, I got curious, and started searching for information on what they had in the UK, and come to find out in 2006, 2 Entertain released a "Collectors Edition" set of 3 dual-layered DVDs.  How much better is it?
2005 US Warner Bros/ BBC DVD top; 2006 UK 2 Entertain DVD bottom.
I was mostly just hoping the interlacing would be fixed, and yes, it is.  So many of these UK programs suffer from lazy ports that don't re-scan the original materials and so just wind up interlacing PAL material in North America, so importing is often the ideal solution, and so it is in this instance.  But I was pleasantly surprised to discover a very distinct and all-around superior transfer.  Both releases are 1.33:1, as indeed a 1987 television program should be.  But the UK edition has additional picture along all four sides.  What really sticks out, though, is the color correction.  The first thing you notice in these comparisons, especially the first set of shots, is that sickly green hue over the US image.  The UK edition looks much more natural and attractive throughout.  I mean, to give credit where it's due, in the second set of shots and other points through-out the series, Warners has boosted the contrast and saturation somewhat, which can sometimes be a little more appealing (although there probably shouldn't be any of that blue on the dog).  But overall, there's no contest, 2 Entertain is much preferable to look at.

Audio- and language-wise, there's not such a gulf.  Both releases have the original stereo track in Dolby Digital with optional English subtitles.
But another reason to avoid Warner Bros' disc is that it's completely barebones, apart from an annoying BBC commercial that plays on start-up on both sides of the disc.  Meanwhile, 2 Entertain, as its Collectors Edition banner implies, has some great stuff.  There's an almost 40-minute documentary on Plater.  Fortunes itself gets very brief coverage, but you come away with a stronger appreciation for what he's done here anyway, just based on what you learn about the rest of his career.  Then, there is a series of vintage BBC television programs from '87 and '88.  One interviews Pickup and series director James Cellan Jones, and another talks to Plater.  They're a bit trivial, taking phone calls from home viewers, with one young lady asking Pickup for acting advice; but there's some good insight in there as well.  There's an interview with Emma Thompson, which is fun but very much the equivalent of a Carson or Fallon appearance.  Then there's one labeled Breakfast Time, but it's actually a pretty traditional behind-the-scenes promo featurette, with on-set interviews and B-roll footage.  And finally, there's a segment with three critics, which feels a bit silly at first, but actually, they make some good points, and have familiarity with the novels, so fans should actually get something out of it.

2 Entertain's set also comes in a more attractive slipbox... not to mention, what is going on with that awful air-brush painting of Thompson on the US DVD cover?  Neither cover design is terribly good (look how both of them slap those airplanes around the pyramid in the background), but at least you can glance at the UK edition without wincing.
So even though we're talking DVD to DVD, I'd still say this is a must-update, even more than many DVDs to BDs or BDs to UHDs have been.  If you own the US DVD, you've gotta swap it out.  I mean, unless the BBC ever sees fit to restore this classic to HD.  You'd think with its massive production values, awards, artistic qualities, critical reception, star power, etc, this would be high on the list.  But for whatever reason, studios interest in putting out these celebrated classics is very low, and the prognosis for a blu is practically nill.  In the meantime, the Hoover dam couldn't stop the flood of Jess Franco, Andy Milligan, Full Moon and Troma titles getting issued and reissued out the wazoo.  And don't get me wrong, I obviously dig my trashy cult titles as much as anyone and more than most, but come on, where are our priorities?  They should be right here.

Controversial DVDs: Blackadder Supposedly Remastered

I've done a bunch of Controversial Blus posts before, but how about one for DVDs?  Because this situation is a real fiasco, and with no HD bumps on the horizon, it's still where we're at in 2022.

We're here to talk Blackadder, the clever and inventive historical sitcom that revealed a very different side to its star Rowan Atkinson than most know him for today.  It ran for four seasons, each depicting a different descendant of the Blackadder family line throughout British history.  Season 1 is the most ambitious, set in Shakespearian times, with the wonderful Brian Blessed as King Richard IV and Peter Cook as Richard III, plus beloved costars Tony Robinson and Tim McInnery.  Later seasons honed the formula into a slightly more conventional sitcom (a lot of jokes get just the thinnest repaints as they recur year after year), but they also introduce a slew of terrific cast members, including Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie, Miranda Richardson, Robbie Coltrane, Simon Jones and Jim Broadbent, who continued to breath fresh, exciting life into its ever-invigorating run.  So it might be nice if they got it right on home video.
The BBC released Blackadder on DVD with Warner Bros in a pretty definitive, five-disc "Complete Collector's Set" digibook in 2001.  And in 2005, they reissued the same set in a traditional amary case.  They also released seasons individually starting in 2001.  But however you decided to purchase it, these same discs were the sole, go-to way to add Blackadder to your home video collection here in the US.  But then, in 2009, BBC came out with a new, Remastered Ultimate Edition 6-disc digibook set (reissued in a traditional amary case in 2014), now in conjunction with 2 Entertain rather than Warner Bros... I'm guessing because rights lapsed.  This set's packaging proudly proclaims, in all caps, that it "INCLUDES EVERY EPISODE OF BLACKADDER DIGITALLY RESTORED FROM THE ORIGINAL PROGRAM MASTERS!"  Okay, we know it's all still SD, but still, for a big fan, it sounds worth upgrading to, no?
2001 BBC DVD top; 2014 BBC DVD bottom.
Well, have a look at the above.  Without looking at the caption, could you even tell me which was the remastered version?  They look like pretty much the same, garishly interlaced transfers to me.  To be fair, they're not identical.  They're both 1.33:1, but framing sometimes shifts slightly.  In the first set of shots, it moves a few pixels lower.  It doesn't in the second.  But at different points throughout the show, it sometimes shifts.  And if you're thinking that second set of shots are off a frame, that's because the one frame doesn't actually exist in the other transfer, which is almost certainly a symptom of these US DVDs simply re-encoding transfers made for UK PAL discs to NTSC.  But for all intents and purposes, despite these slight variations, there is no gain in PQ here.  And it goes a bit cheaper these days, but the "remastered" edition originally listed for $79.98.  That's a lot to throw down for no gain.  And let's look at some more.
2001 BBC DVD top; 2011 BBC DVD mid; 2014 BBC DVD bottom.
Blackadder's Christmas Carol
is a stand-alone television special from 1988, which means it originally aired between seasons 3 and 4.  It's a pretty fun subversion where Ebenezer Blackadder is an ultra-cheerful, kind man who's always in the holiday spirit and, we're told in the opening theme song, doesn't laugh at toilet humor.  He's visited by Christmas spirits not to teach him a lesson, but to simply reward him for a job well done, but the visions they show wind up convincing him the world is an unfair place, and he becomes the cynical, self-centered nihilist he's always been in his other iterations.

Besides the two sets, I also have this episode on a third DVD: disc 2 of the BBC and 2 Entertain's 2011 2-disc set, BBC Holiday Comedy Collection, which collects holiday specials from a variety of British comedies, from Are You Being Served? to The Vicar of Dibley.  Unsurprisingly, then, it's a closer match to the 2014 DVD, which was also put out in conjunction with 2 Entertain, although you'll notice slight differences with the framing across all three discs.  Still, while the brightness also slightly changes between the 2004 and newer discs, they are, in essence, all equally interlaced messes, and it feels pretty arbitrary to declare any one of them superior to the others.

I have read some reports that one joke was cut out of some versions of this special, but I'm happy to report that all three discs here have it properly included and are uncut.
2001 BBC DVD top; 2014 BBC DVD bottom.
Now, I left the negative space around the Cavalier Years (a 15-minute short shot for a Comic Relief television special in 1988) shots to show you a peculiarity in framing.  Notice how the 2001 DVD has a letterbox along the bottom.  The Remaster removes that, lowers the image, and in so doing, reveals more picture that had been trimmed along the top.  So that's a nice little correction.  But in those season 2 shots, the remaster actually zooms in, cropping the image along all four sides.  And just look at what they did to the 1999 Back & Forth special!  They've widened it to 1.78, yes revealing a little more along the sides, but blatantly stretching the image horizontally for the sake of "filling" modern televisions.  It's a disaster; I mean, just look at it.  So I'd say that's two steps forwards and one step back, but Back & Forth is a much more obvious flaw than any of the pros and cons in the others ones.  And yes, they're all still interlaced.  To be clear, everything, on every disc in both sets is interlaced.
All discs in both sets, and the Holiday Collection, feature Dolby 2.0 audio with optional English subtitles, except for Back and Forth, which both sets provide in 5.1.  But there is one important distinction I have to credit the Remastered edition with.  There is a joke in episode 3 of season 3 that has been cut out of the original DVD, but is restored in this Ultimate edition.  It's an inoffensive (and not particularly funny) reference to The Scarlet Pimpernel, so I doubt it was cut for censorious reasons... but for whatever reason it was missing from the old DVDs and it's back in the new ones.  So that's one real bit of good they did.
The other real good they did was cook up a bunch of new special features.  But that's undercut somewhat by the fact that they lost all the extras from the 2004 set.  Besides some inconsequential stuff in the disc menus and a few bonus trailers, the 2004 set chiefly has two noteworthy extras.  The first is a hefty, 25-minute on-camera interview with writer/ creator Richard Curtis.  And the second is an almost 20-minute featurette called Baldrick's Diary - The Making of Back & Forth.  Now, you could be forgiven for thinking that second one is on the new set, quite clearly on disc 5: Baldrick's Video Diary, a featurette on the making of Back & Forth.  But actually, these are quite different.  One mostly follows Curtis around, while the other is hosted and partially shot by Tony Robinson.  As you'd expect, they do cover much of the same ground; but they are actually two entirely different documentary shorts on the making of the same show, and serious fans will probably want both.
But it has to be said, The Ultimate Edition comes up with a whole lot more.  First, there are eight episode commentaries, sporadically appearing throughout seasons 2, 3 and 4.  Sometimes they're a little slow, but they're mostly all rather fun, and they change up the roster of who's speaking, so sometimes you'll get Rowan Atkinson with producer John Lloyd, or Lloyd with Ben Elton and Richard Curtis, or Tony Robinson and Tim McInnery.  Stephen Fry even does two solo.  And if that's not all, there's a new, one-hour retrospective documentary called Blackadder Rides Again, which is rather excellent.  And it's back up by almost two hours of extended interviews.  Put into competition, the new set of extras are clearly better.  But as a wise Old El Paso spokesperson once said, why don't we have both?
So it's a real mess.  It's not really "Controversial," because every review I've found just takes the BBC's word for it that the remastered versions are nice and very welcome improvements without any actual analysis of the picture quality.  Now we see how controversial this situation should have been.  Which set is better?  In some ways the Remastered Ultimate Edition did make some genuine improvements.  But in other ways, they actually made things worse and the original Complete Collector's Set remains preferable.  And most of the episodes just look equally poor on both.  Purists will need both sets so they can get all the uncut episodes looking as best they can, as well as both sets of extras.  But for most viewers, it's a frustrating and disappointing tie; and the only real solution would be for the BBC to finally bend down to restore everything for HD (without stretching it to 1.78!) and compiling all of the available extras... maybe even a few new ones.  But it's been a long time with no sign of any such project coming so far, so we'll probably have to make do.  But whatever you decide to get or not get, at least know that this remastering business was pretty much a crock.

The Ultimate Sense & Sensibility

Boy, I've gotta get in gear - my list of discs I plan to cover on this site is outpacing the posts I actually get done.  I've got so much I want to do here!  There are so many compelling new releases coming out, but I don't want to get trapped into only covering new releases.  So let's jump right into A Pair of Twilight Times, starting with Sense & Sensibility.  Specifically, this is the 1995 Academy Award winning feature film version adapted by Emma Thompson and directed by Ang Lee.

Update 6/21/19 - 10/20/21: I never would've thought we'd see the day where Jane Austen made it to 4K Ultra HD (well, barring Pride & Prejudice & Zombies, I suppose...), but here we are!  Sony have included 1995's Sense & Sensibility in their impressive 'Columbia Classics Volume 2' 14-disc set.  And is my reviewing this a spoiler of five other Ultra HD discs in the very near future?  Ohhh, could be.  😉
Sense & Sensibility is Jane Austen's first novel with surprisingly clear themes - one sister represents the sense (pragmatism) and the other the sensibility (romanticism).  You don't exactly need an advanced degree in literature.  But it's still such a rich, layered and funny story, and Thompson expertly compresses the novel to feature length without compromising any of the wit or heart, while Lee presents us with sweeping vistas and gorgeous locales.  The cast is perfectly charming and marvelous, from leads Kate Winslet, Alan Rickman, Hugh Grant and of course Thompson herself, to the brilliantly selected supporting players like Imelda Staunton, Hugh Laurie, Robert Hardy and Elizabeth Spriggs.  I could go on and on about the merits about this film, but I don't think I need to.  1995's Sense & Sensibility is pretty widely recognized as classic desert island material.  You know, for a while a thought my DVD would be good enough, but no, this requires a proper upgrade.
Sense and Sensibility debuted on DVD all the way back in 1999 with an anamorphic special edition which held up well throughout all of the SD days.  As such, the DVD was reissued multiple times over the years, once packaged with a paperback copy of the novel, once with a hokey Sense and Sensibility-branded diary and pen, and once as a double-feature with Remains Of the Day.  But it was always the same DVD.  It's the HD era now, though, so we needed a blu-ray.  And this was just the kind of high-profile title you could count on Twilight Time to license from Sony.  And so in 2015, thankfully, instead of their standard barebones editions, they came through with a proper special edition.  It seemed like that would be the final, definitive release for this title, but not so!  In 2021, it's been updated to UHD in a new, even fancier 2-disc set, available (to date) only as a part of the 'Columbia Classics Volume 2' 14-disc boxed set.
1) 1999 Columbia Tri-Star DVD; 2) 2015 Twilight Time BD;
3) 2021 Columbia Tri-Star BD; 4) 2021 Columbia Tri-Star UHD.




Twilight Time's blu turned out to be an even bigger bump than I was expecting.  Naturally, the DVD being from the 90s has a lot of chunky compression that I was confident our 2015 BD would tidy up neatly.  And we advance from a slightly pillar-boxed 1.76:1 to a letterboxed 1.85:1.  That amounts to us losing a dollop along the top; but gaining a sliver on the right.  It's really less about picture information than just graduating to a proper, more natural AR.  But beyond those predicted improvements, we can also see that the DVD had a red hue over the whole image, which the blu lifts off, allowing the colors to really pop as a result.  Whites are now truly white instead of pink, and the sky is gently blue instead of scary purple. Grain is rather finely captured.  Say whatever else you want about 'em; you always get good scans when you deal with Sony.

Which is why they apparently didn't feel the need to re-scan it in 2021.  According to accompanying book, this the new BD and UHD are taken from the same 2012 4k scan of the original picture negative as the previous blu.  But they have re-color timed it for HDR, with input from the editor and final approval by Lee, plus additional dirt and scratch clean-up.  That means, for the two BDs, there's barely any difference at all.  But the colors are richer on the UHD, and the higher resolution means a more natural, less blocky/ pixelated image, though it's the sort of thing you'll need a big screen to appreciate.

Columbia actually gave us a choice between the original Dolby stereo mix and a newly created 5.1, not to mention Portuguese and Spanish dubs.  It also had English, Chinese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish and Thai subtitles.  Twilight Time has kept both audio tracks, and bumped them up to DTS-HD in the process, but cut the subtitles down to just English.  And the new UHD?  Oh boy, it has an all new Atmos mix, and the previous 5.1 DTS-HD plus a bajillion dubs (Czech, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Polish, Russian, Spanish and Turkish) and even more subtitle options... I'm not going to list them all out, but yes, English and English SDH are amongst them.
So one reason I held onto the DVD for so long was because it is nicely furnished with extras.  We get two audio commentaries: one with Thompson and producer Lindsay Doran, and the other with Lee and producer James Schamus - and they're both very good.  Not enough discs let us hear from the screenwriters, and it's all the more rewarding when said screenwriter is Emma Thompson.  We also get two brief but amusing deleted scenes, Thompson's clever acceptance speech at The Golden Globes, the trailer, a four-page insert with notes by an uncredited author and some bonus trailers.

I was pleasantly surprised to discover that Twilight Time not only carried over all the old DVD extras, which they definitely don't always do (*cough, cough* As Good As It Gets *cough*).  But I was even more delighted when I realized that they were also including several vintage but previously unreleased featurettes.  There are five in total, and grant us interviews with many of the cast and crew, and some tantalizing glimpses behind-the-scenes.  There's also Twilight Time's ever reliable isolated score track, an additional international trailer and an 8-page booklet with notes by Julie Kirgo.

The Columbia Classics retains nearly all of that, including the additional Twilight Time featurettes, except they seem to have misplaced the Golden Globes speech.  Whoops!  I can't complain, though, since in its place they've added a 25th Anniversary Reunion, where the Lee, Thompson, Winslet, Doran, Staunton, Imogen Stubbs, Greg Wise and Myriam Francois all jump on their webcams for a roughly half-hour conversation.  The set includes an impressive, full-color hardcover book about all the included films, but specifically with notes on Sense & Sensibility by Den of Geek's Kayti Burt and an excerpt from the screenplay.  It's an elaborate fold-out box with all the other films and their extras, of course, and the case for each of the individual features, including Sense, comes in an elegant slipcover.
Hey!  While I'm here, why don't we take a quick look at all the other versions of Sense & Sensibility out there.  Yes, I know... this is why my "plan to cover"s are outpacing my "covered"s, but let's do it anyway.  All told, there are four direct adaptations of Sense & Sensibility, not including this ridiculous thing and the modernized Kollywood adaptation.  Memorably, there is one for each decade.  We've just been over the 90's one, so here are the other three.
2009 2 Entertain/ Warner Bros/ BBC DVD.
The 70's Version - Originally aired in 1971 and divided into four 45-minute long episodes.  Being a series rather than a single film, the expectation is that now we're finally going to see all the parts cut out book for the film's screenplay in this much longer version.  And there is a little of that, but really, this is only about 40 minutes longer, so it's not a revelation of restored characters and plot points.  Indeed, this version trims out Margaret, the youngest of the three main sisters.  The additional bits we do get are nice, but hampered by the far more constrained production.  Sir John is played by an actor too young for the part, hamming it up like a school play's Mr. Fezziwig, and pretty much every scene is necessarily "stagey."  Certainly, there's enough here to recommend it to the committed Austenphiles - Keeping Up Appearance's Patrica Routledge steals every scene she's in.  But this is certainly the most forgettable entry out of the lot, remarkable mainly only for being the first.

The BBC's DVD is appropriately full-frame (it was a 70's television production, after all), at 1.31:1.  It's also interlaced, though that may be less of a PAL to NTSC conversion thing than just a baked-in trait of a vintage TV tape master.  But less forgivable is the strong edge enhancement, which would've been the sort of thing you could get away with more easily in the smaller screen days of standard definition, but really looks poor on modern televisions.  The disc is completely barebones, though it does offer optional English subtitles.
2004 Warner Bros/ BBC DVD.
The 80's Version - First broadcast in 1981, this adaptation is broken up into seven short (22-23 minutes long) episodes.  When you consider the fact that means we're getting seven sets of opening and closing credits, that makes it only slightly longer than the movie.  Indeed, poor Margaret gets the chop here, too.  Still, they manage to find some excellent moments and memorable exchanges the 90's version neglected, and generally does a much better job of drawing out the comedy than the 70's version.  For instance, they get some of the best use out of secondary characters like Robert Ferrars and Mr. Palmer.  Admittedly, a handful of moments get overwrought in this one, but the way it's broken into such shorter pieces, make it uniquely pleasant to casually graze on over time rather then binge in a single run.

Curiously, this release is a flipper disc with a blank side.  It's fullscreen, too, as it should be, at 1.32:1, but it's also interlaced and a bit hazy, though at least not as tampered with as the 70's version.  I assume this was shot on tape, too, so there are no film elements to go back to, meaning this is probably about as good as it possibly could look.  Showing this off on your big-screen TV definitely won't impress your neighbors, but Warner describes this as "lovingly remastered" and I believe them.  Optional English subtitles are included, but nothing else.  This one's available separately, but if you're a fan, I'd recommend getting it as part of the 6-disc Jane Austen Collection, which includes a strong 70s-80s BBC adaptation of each of Austen's novels.
2008 2 Entertain/ WGBH/ BBC DVD.
The 2000's Version - From 2008.  I was excited for this one, as it's by Andrew Davies, the man who gave us the ultimate Pride & Prejudice, not to mention a wealth of terrific Dickens and other masterpiece adaptations.  It might sound corny, and admittedly he's had one or two misfires in his storied career, but I'd say his name is a genuine hallmark of quality.  Well, I can't say he quite matched his Pride, but this is a strong version in its own right, with some slightly shameless attempts to make this production a little more risque.  It opens with a sexy fireplace love scene and features a fit Edward chopping wood in a wet, transparent shirt.  Comprising just three, longer episodes, this series' noteworthy casting includes The Walking Dead's notorious Governor as Colonel Brandon and an excellent Sir John, plus it's also got a very seductive score that sticks with you.  In a vacuum, I'd recommend this version, but living in a world that's already presented us with three previous Sense and Sensibilities, this one doesn't give us too much that we don't already have.  I'd say the 90s version is the most engaging watch, and the 80s adds a lot from the book that the later editions let slip away.  So once you've got those two, there isn't so much value left to extract from the 70s and 2000s versions.

Still, it's good enough that you may well want to pick this up.  And if you do, well, it definitely looks more modern with its widescreen 1.78:1 framing and clearly high def source.  But of course it's been brought down to a standard def DVD, and an unfortunately interlaced one at that  And a film this new really has no excuse to be interlaced, so it doesn't get the pass I'm giving to the previous to editions.  Apart from that, though, it looks nice enough.  The colors are vivid, and it doesn't feel like we're many generations removed from the source film.  Oh, and yes, English subtitles are an option here, too.
Miss Austen Regrets
In fact, this is also a nice little special edition.  Each episode gets an audio commentary by a revolving team of cast and crew: director John Alexander, producer Anne Pivcevic, Hattie Morahan who plays Elinor and Dan Stevens who plays Edward on episode 1, then Alexander, Charity Wakefield who played Marianne and Dominic Cooper who played Willoughby on episode 2, and finally the episode 1 team again for the last one.  Then there's a half-hour interview with interview Davies and Pivcevic, who spend a surprising amount of time talking about the Thompson film, and a photo gallery.  And that's just disc 1.  A second bonus disc includes the fine, feature-length dramatization of Jane Austen's real life, Miss Austen Regrets.  It's letterboxed to an unusual 1.81:1 and is also interlaced, looking generally as good as Sense, and also includes English subtitles.  In addition, there's a substantial audio-only extra: Remembering Jane Austen, a 70-minute, four-part radio play based on the memoir of James Austen-Leigh, the only written account of somebody who personally knew her.

This 2-disc set is available separately or in an attractively boxed Collector's Set box that pairs it with the 2007 adaptation of Persuasion.   There is also a Japanese 2-disc blu-ray release, which hopefully(!) clears up the interlacing issue and sharpens up some of the fine detail, but it's hard to find any concrete information about it online, and from what I gather is missing all of the special features, apart from the Davies/ Pivcevic interview and the photo gallery.
So the 90's version has been given an essential blu-ray release by Twilight Time.  And then they topped it with the new 2021 UHD.  But unless you're prepared to spring for the whole Columbia Classics Collection, the TT might still be your best bet (and used copies will probably start pouring into the market as people who did upgrade offload their previous edition).  As for the other Sense & Sensibilities?  Well, I'd start with the one from the 80's, then possibly add the 2000's and 1970's versions, in that order, depending how Austen-mad you are.  Oh, and actually you could squeeze that Kollywood version in there ahead of the 70's version, too.  It's pretty neat and the musical numbers are beautifully filmed.  The Kino DVD has English subs.