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From Ohio.com

Marti Noxon

Marti Noxon - "Point Pleasant" Tv Series DVDs include series’ wild finish

By R.D. Heldenfels

Friday 21 October 2005, by Webmaster

I told producer Marti Noxon that I had finally gotten to see the thirteenth episode of Point Pleasant. She laughed and said, ``Oh, yeah, the crazy one.’’

No kidding. On view in a new DVD set, it has violence, horror, some laughs, at least one inside joke (Noxon’s mother is an extra in a key scene) and a flamboyant unleashing of evil on the world that will both make you glad the story is over and wish for more.

It’s so wild because by the time the show made that episode, everyone knew it would not be back for a second season.

The early reviews had been consistently harsh (a ``dog-pile,’’ Noxon said), and the ratings low. Fox pretty much stopped promoting it after three telecasts, she recalled, and the network pulled the show off the air entirely with five episodes unshown.

Still, Noxon is happy about Tuesday’s DVD release of Point Pleasant: The Complete Series (Fox, 13 episodes, three discs, $39.98).

``I felt like we got better as the show went along,’’ said Noxon, whose other credits include Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel. ``We found our sea legs five or six episodes in, we found the tone of the show after a a bit of a rocky start.’’

The series involved Christina Nickson (Elisabeth Harnois), a young woman washed ashore in a troubled small town, and bringing a lot more trouble with her. In the beginning, working off another producer’s concept, Noxon found herself dealing with something that was part horror, part soap opera.

``It was a concept that I hadn’t fully gotten a handle on,’’ she said. ``But we found out that it worked when it was horror or darkly funny.’’

She especially enjoyed making Christina out-and-out evil, and then forcing the other characters to deal with it.

One disappointment: The only DVD extra is a making-of segment done before the show had even aired. It’s a big contrast to a new complete Buffy set being released on Nov. 15, which adds still more to the copious extras from Buffy’s single-season releases.

``Even we are getting tired of hearing ourselves talk,’’ Noxon said.

More DVD: I was not a fan of Hart to Hart when the romantic adventure ran on ABC from 1979 to 1984. But I enjoyed the audio commentary on the new DVD of Hart to Hart: The Complete First Season (Sony, premiere movie and 22 episodes, six discs, $49.95).

Executive producer Tom Mankiewicz and stars Robert Wagner and Stefanie Powers offer a relaxed and conversational look at the show during commentary on the premiere. They joke about the plots and dialogue, offer up trivia (Sugar Ray Robinson was Wagner’s first choice to play servant Max) and have such a good time, it makes the show seem better.

The DVD also includes a short feature on the making of the show.

Among the extras on the second-season DVD of 3rd Rock From the Sun (Anchor Bay, 26 episodes, four discs, $39.98) is a cute one: A pair of 3-D glasses to watch two episodes with 3-D segments. (You can also watch those episodes without the glasses. Either way, you’ll laugh.) One modification: The hour-long season opener is presented in its syndicated, two-episode form; same thing with the hour-long season finale.

With Christmas on people’s minds, the big (and expensive) DVD boxes are starting to take up shelf space, like the Buffy box I mentioned and a complete Sex and the City collection on Nov. 1.

On Tuesday you will be able to find Ken Burns: American Lives (PBS, seven documentaries, $139.99), Empires: Dynasties (PBS, five programs, $89.99) and Horatio Hornblower: Collector’s Edition (A&E, eight movies, $79.95).

Each set puts previously released material in a new package. The Burns set has Frank Lloyd Wright, Horatio’s Drive, Lewis & Clark, Mark Twain, Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony, Thomas Jefferson and Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson.


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