Fury Movie Streaming
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Fury Movie Streaming.
Movie Title: Fury Fury is available for streaming or downloading. |
For those of us who long for the DVD Collector’s Series of “Fury” (the epic of a horse and the boy who loved him), this status will have to do for now.
All four episodes in this plot are from the earliest shows of the series and the fine news is that the pilot episode is up first (the other episodes are ‘the Stranger who claims to be Joey’s sincere Father’, ‘the rabid dog bite’ episode and ‘the white mare and Joey’s jealousy’) .
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The artwork is fair to the series with the familiar shot of Bobby Diamond posing with “Fury” (from a later season of the note) and this is a sweet miniature collectible.
Unfortunately, this spot appears to be an weak video of an ancient film transferred to DVD. Fortunately, for fans of the prove, the quality is not unlike the television quality a child sitting down to examine reruns of “Fury” in the 1960′s would have seen.
I saw “Fury” reruns in the behind 1960′s and the early 1970′s on KTVI-TV, Channel 2, in St. Louis, Missouri at 7:15 a.m. weekdays where it ran for many years after “The Lone Ranger” at 6:45 a.m.
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This series originally ran five seasons on NBC (1955-60) and was so hugely well-liked it ran another six years in reruns on NBC followed by years of syndicated reruns before it disappeared along with most other black-and-white rerun series during American television’s unusual 1970′s obsession with all-color programming.
Bobby Diamond grounded the demonstrate with his infectious fancy for “Fury” and was an apparently profitable actor who worked well with potential prove rival kid characters “Pee Wee” and later “Packy” who no doubt came in as the series progressed to give very young viewers someone to record to as “Joey” old-fashioned into adolescence.
The cast was uniformly ample and the writing fun and always savory.
The episode “The Tornado” (not on this spot) is downright provocative and the same is just of many of the series highlights.
Unlike many TV shows for kids, “Fury” always seemed to avoid the traps of oddball camp, excessive sentiment, cartoon violence and, most famous, avoided lifeless stories throughout the bustle.
“Fury” extolled masculine pursuits and male role models.
“Fury” himself was certainly symbolic of Joey’s inner healthy pride and strength as both “Fury” and Joey made a stride from lost orphans to positions of strength and happiness.
With the coming of DVD series collections, we can hope that “Fury” will one day be available on an extensive collection on DVD (it will no doubt be a spacious hit) .
The series grew up and developed through the urge and if anyone could gawk all of the episodes in succession, “Fury” would be assured legions of fresh fans.
“Fury” could and should be remembered as one of the best and brightest American Television shows ever produced for children (and adults) .
First of all, “hats off” to Alpha Video for bringing this series to DVD. For most of us “baby boomers” who fondly remember “Fury”, this is like finding buried esteem. I can only hope that the rest of the episodes will eventually be released. The video transfer is worthy, considering this series will impress it’s 50th anniversary in October (2005) . There is a video “glitch” in the second episode and some lines in the fourth episode, but this could be an age factor, however it’s acceptable. Ancient actor, Denver Pyle (“Dukes Of Hazzard”), appears in the second episode. In the fourth episode, Ken Osmond, (two years before he made Eddie Haskell a household name), makes one of his first appearances in front of the camera. For the note and memories..it’s a winner!..and you won’t have to go through the trauma of looking at an feeble TV test pattern before it comes on,… like some of us did so long ago on Saturday mornings.
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