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189 of 194 found the following review helpful:
DVD DetailsNov 04, 2003
By Michael Allred Amazon has not yet listed the DVDs details yet (heck, they don't even mention QUEEN on the page either!) but for those who don't know, here's all the info you need:Disc 1 1. A Kind of Magic 2. I Want It All 3. Radio Ga Ga 4. I Want To Break Free 5. Breakthru 6. Under Pressure 7. Scandal 8. Who Wants To Live Forever 9. The Miracle 10. It's A Hard Life 11. The Invisible Man 12. Las Palabras De Amor 13. Friends Will Be Friends 14. Body Language 15. Hammer To Fall 16. Princes Of The Universe 17. One Vision All in DTS 5.1 Surround Sound & PCM Stereo Mixes and in widescreen. Audio Commentary by the band Disk 2 Hot Space Section Bonus Videos : "Back Chat" "Calling All Girls" "Staying Power" Live from Milton Keynes '82 The Works Section Montreux Golden Rose Pop Festival The Works Interviews Freddie Mercury Interview A Kind Of Magic Section Montreux Golden Rose Pop Festival The Magic Interviews One Vision Documentary "Extended Vision" video The Miracle Section The Miracle Interviews Making the Miracle Videos Documentary Making The Miracle Album Cover Bonus Video : "Who Wants To Live Forever" - for the Bone Marrow Donor Appeal The videos off the "Innuendo" album (and beyond) will be on "Greatest Video Hits 3" DVD, due sometime late 2004.
18 of 18 found the following review helpful:
Queen at their very, very bestDec 25, 2003
By Braeden P. Jeffery In my opinion, there is no Queen album superior to "Greatest Hits II". It is their very best album of any kind, be it compilation, live or original studio. Thus the thought of a video version had me suitably interested. "Greatest Video Hits 2" is a superb DVD set, mostly because, finally, the team who compiled it know what bonus footage was about. "GVH1" bonus footage was decidedly lacking, "Live At Wembley" showed improvement, but finally, with three hours of hugely worthwhile clips, docos and interviews...THIS is what I've been waiting for! On the first disk, we have sixteen of Queen's great clips of the eighties. These are all the clips from their hit singles, ranging from "Under Pressure" in 1981 to "The Miracle", their last single of the decade in 1989. Also featured on disc one is the Top Of The Pops performance of "Las Parablas Des Amor", which is very well filmed and actually quite enjoyable (it's a great song, at any rate). However, one of the things that made "Greatest Hits II" as a CD/LP so solid were the four tracks from "Innuendo". These have been omitted (presumably so that "Greatest Video Hits III" isn't just "Made In Heaven with No-One But You tacked on"), thus the compilation isn't musically quite as impressive. However, there's still some really great stuff on this DVD and, though it's not as well compiled as it's audio-only counterpart, it's still well worth the money. The bonus material is copious. Including interviews with the band for "The Works", "A Kind Of Magic" and "The Miracle", as well as the infamous "I'm Just A Musical Prostitue, m'dear" interview with Freddie Mercury, it's well worth it for that alone. Also featured are two bonus clips from "Hot Space" ("Calling All Girls" and "Backchat") and a brilliant live performance of "Staying Power". The Montreux Rose Festival footage is actually quite poor, but it's kind of fun if you don't mind watching the band lipsync (Freddie lipsyncs fairly poorly in the Works clips on the first disc anyway, and this is only worse). There is absolutely no reason not to get this, but set some money aside later on for "GVH3".
15 of 15 found the following review helpful:
Stateside Queen fans rejoice once again.Nov 04, 2004
By BGFN8
"If you ain't listenin' you ain't livin'"
In 2002, Queen began releasing DVDs, the first of the installment being Greatest Video Hits 1, which was phenomenal (see my review for that). Live At Wembley Stadium, a DVD of the classic live show in its entirety, followed, continuing the high standard set for Queen DVD releases. Shortly after, we got what we knew we were going to get, Greatest Video Hits 2.
Picking up where GVH1 left off, this package includes ALL of their videos of the '80s. Thankfully, Hollywood Records was nice enough to release this and all the other Queen DVDs, past, present and future, totally making up for tacking on god-awful remixes on the CD releases of the albums. Shockingly, the tracklist is not identical to the original Greatest Flix 2 (which was never released here in the US).
Of course, by the 80s, music video became a mainstream format, and had evolved into something all on its own, so the material found here is visually more interesting than on GVH1. In "A Kind Of Magic," Freddie Mercury plays a wizard which turns three bums (Brian May, Roger Taylor, and John Deacon) into rock stars. In "I Want To Break Free" (the video that scared away homophobic Americans), they dress in drag, and Freddie dances with the ballet. Let me also add that Roger Taylor looks an awful lot like Alicia Silverstone in that video, and I actually fooled a friend into thinking that it was a hot girl ("Dude! That girl is so hot!!"). In "Princes Of The Universe," Freddie Mercury engages briefly in a swordfight with Christopher Lambert of Highlander, using his microphone stand. "The Miracle," featuring kids imitating Queen PERFECTLY, is a real joy to watch. In "The Invisible Man," Queen are characters in a young boy's computer game come to life, and although dated, a very enjoyable viewing experience. "I Want It All," "One Vision" (actual footage filmed as the track was recorded), "Friends Will Be Friends," and "Hammer To Fall" are all excellent performance videos.
As you know, some of these videos were originally available in the states on the Hollywood-compiled Classic Queen VHS. It is a real joy to finally be able to see the videos for songs such as "Breakthru," "Scandal' (a highly underrated song), "It's A Hard Life," "Friends Will Be Friends," and "The Invisible Man" in such excellent sound and picture quality. I'm sure that British fans are happy to finally be able to own the video for "Body Language" as it was previously unavailble there (correct me if I am wrong), but it was included on the Hollywood-compiled Greatest Hits.
Once again, there is a bonus disc with plenty to offer, featuring a section devoted to each of the four albums covered here. The Hot Space section includes the videos for "Back Chat" and "Calling All Girls," plus a live performance of "Staying Power" from Milton Keynes (which can now be thought of as a preview of things to come with the upcoming "Queen On Fire" CD/DVD release). There are plenty of interviews and behind the scenes footage here, as well as Queen's two performances at the Montreux Pop Festival, where they mime to the records (rather annoying to watch, but at least they are good sports about it, and Queen visual material is definitely good for any fan, so no complaints there). Two major awesome features include a 1/2-hour documentary on the writing and recording of "One Vision" (listen for the funny alternate lyrics) and a brief feature on the making of the amazing album cover for "The Miracle."
The only downside to this collection is that the videos from the Innuendo album (my favorite by Queen) are not included here. But that does not diminish the quality of this DVD. Everything included here makes the DVD worthy of a 5-star rating. When you think about it, The Innuendo videos coupled with the rest of the Queen video catalogue will make for a nice third Greatest Video Hits compilation (which will see the light of day soon I hope).
Greatest Video Hits 2 continues the high standard set by its counterpart, and of course has a very high drool factor. Every Queen fan should own this DVD. Despite the absence of the Innuendo videos, this collection is well worth owning, and a splendid time is guaranteed for all.
5/5
7 of 7 found the following review helpful:
The creme brulee of rock video dvd'sDec 06, 2004
By Isolde Jane Holland
"Isolde"
The only complaint I have about this DVD is that the irresistible combination of witty, inventive, diverse music videos and three hours of bonus features(interviews, documentaries, concert footage) has completely spoiled me for the dvd's being put out by other artists! I didn't watch much MTV growing up, so mostof the videos were completely new to me. In the utterly beguiling and aptly named ,"A kind of magic" an elegantly caped magician (Freddie Mercury) takes over a grand old Victorian playhouse and transforms the three indigent gentlemen (Brian May, Roger Taylor and John Deacon) into a rock band. Next up is "I want it all", an insistent, pounding manifesto of impatient entitlement. 1984's (!) "Radio ga-ga" is an ambitious spectacle that intercuts footage from the classic film "Metropolis" with shots of the guys navigating a futuristic cityscape in a flying car and leading a large rally in a raised fist, double handclap salute that was immediately requisitioned by concert attendees worldwide. "Las palabras de amor" is Brian's gracious gracias to Latin America for their unwavering support of Queen from the earliest days to the present. And the justle celebrated video for John's exhileratingly adaptable,"I want to break free" offers the band in deliciously droll drag. Roger accomplishes the nigh impossible by upstaging Freddie(gasp!)as a schoolgirl Lolita. The middle section has Freddie channeling Nijinsky with some alarmingly underfed ballet dancers. Brian's hauntingly beautiful and ethereal paean to undying love,"Who wants to live forever?" becomes a beautiful and ethereal Queen video, with thousands of wavering candles giving it the look of an invisible cathedral. I absolutely love "Hammer to fall", a mesmerizing, excoriating, take no prisoners warning of impending doom. The lighting rig (a Queen trademark) is gorgeous,-at times the band seems bathed in golden fire. This video looks as good as it sounds, which is saying a lot. "It's a hard life" is a misleadingly downbeat title for a splendid life and love affirming ballad sung by Mercury with his customary strength and lyric sensibility. In their audio commentary Roger and brian are ruefully diplomatic about the lavishly opulent video, but I rather like it. There are distinct echoes of the classic 1964 film "Masque of the Red Death" itself a stylish homage to Ingmar Bergman. And Freddie treats us to a devilishly impenitent grin near the end. "Invisible man" has Queen popping out of a kid's video game to perform in his room. Where can I get that game? Some interesting camerawork on a circling dolly. "Breakthru" has them in a Keatonesque vein jamming on top of a speeding train. And this was no back projection trickery, they really DID it. "The miracle" is another hopeful and optimistic Freddie penned ode, and the video is a quirkily irresistible gem, with twelve year old lookalikes uncannily impersonating Queen. The real band emerge for the final verse and play alongside their "clones". "Under pressure" has Queen, David Bowie and Nosferatu in an unforgettable triptych, and "Princes of the universe" incorporates exciting scenes from the film "Highlander". The denouement has a claymore brandishing Chris Lambert stepping out of the movie to interact with the band on a vast soundstage. The communally composed opus "One vision", inspired by Queen's legendary Live Aid triumph, is the centerpiece of "Video hits II", just as "Bohemian rhapsody" was for the first collection. It's a seething, relentless, sense-stirring invocation of universal brotherhood. And since Disc Two gives us both a thirty minute "Making of..." documentary and an extended double length video, we actually get three visions of "One vision", which is perfectly fine by me. Buy and enjoy. [...] Hudson Valley NY USA
8 of 9 found the following review helpful:
Greatest Video Hits...and missesNov 29, 2003
By Michael Allred Queen once again dip into their video vault and release "Greatest Video Hits 2", a 2 DVD set that has as many downs as there are highs. Let's deal with the downs. Queen has once again decided to reformat their videos for a widescreen presentation, in other words the videos are *not* in their original aspect ratio (with the exception of 1 or 2 clips.) This utter disregard for the director's original intent is something that everyone should criticize. If something was filmed for a full screen presentation, then it should be shown that way. Queen have still refused to explain this ridiculous decision. "A Kind of Magic" and "Hammer to Fall" look the worst because of this mindless matting with the former causing everyone to look "fat" and the latter making everyone looked stretched "thin." Color saturation also continues to be a problem as well as contrast. Director David Mallet was in charge of the "remastering" and he's done an awful job of it (and that includes 'Video Hits 1'.) Yes, these videos look a bit better than volume 1 but that's because they're more recent, not because of somebody "cleaning up" the videos. If this is "remastered" then my name is George W. Bush. On the other hand the DTS surround mixes are exceptional (as always.) However the 5.1 label is rather misleading as the center speaker is rarely used (and I stress "rarely") so DTS 4.1 might be a better description. Anyway, the sound is rich, crisp and clean, especially the mixes of "The Miracle" tracks. The audio commentary by Brian May and Roger Taylor is very frank and honest - when they hate a video like "It's a Hard Life", they come right out and say it. Roger is usually pretty funny. Thankfully they decided not to edit in old audio clips of Freddie Mercury and John Deacon into the mix as they did with 'Video Hits 1.' They just didn't fit in. The bonus material on disc 2 is something of a mixed bag. The "Hot Space" section offers the best of the lot with rare video clips like "Back Chat" being included WITH DTS and audio commentary (unlike GVH1 which were just thrown on there.) The live clip of "Staying Power" was awesome and I hope it's a teaser for a forthcoming "Milton Keynes" DVD. All of the interview segments were generally boring, I would've prefered new interview footage so that Brian and Roger could put the albums/videos into perspective after all these years. The Montreux "performances" where Queen mimed to songs was just painful to watch. (Speaking of painful, there's an easter egg on disc 2 featuring a version of "Who Wants To Live Forever" by 1 of Brian May's kids and it will certainly make you cringe.) The making of segments for "The Miracle" videos were interesting though but there just wasn't enough of it. More behind-the-sceens material please! The DVDs menus continue to improve however the packaging such as the cover art barely fit in the case, it seems it's too small and comes up short because you can see the holes in the DVDs case. A minor complaint I know. Anyway, Queen's DVDs could be the best on the market but their continuing disregard for OAR (Original Aspect Ratio) is alarming, cutting off vital pieces of the picture frame and the resulting distortion of the image really brings the overall quality down a great deal. However I suppose you can always turn your TV off and listen to the surround mixes (which is a shame, this is DVD we're talking about, an audio AND visual format. Sadly Queen seem to put more effort into how it sounds rather than how it looks.)
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