DVD Movie Guide @ dvdmg.com Music & Musicals at Amazon.com.
.
Review Archive:  # | A-C | D-F | G-I | J-L | M-O | P-R | S-U | V-Z | Viewer Ratings | Main
EMI

MOVIE INFO
Director: Various
Cast: Smashing Pumpkins

MPAA: Not Rated

DVD DETAILS
Presentation:
Standard 1.33:1
Audio:
English Dolby Stereo
Subtitles: None

Runtime: 79 min.
Price: $19.98
Release Date: 12/4/2001

Bonus:
• Audio Commentary from Band and Directors
• Outtakes
• Documentaries
• “I Am One” Previously Unreleased Video
• “Try - A Short Film”
• “Untitled” Video Montage


PURCHASE
DVD
Music album

Search Products:

EQUIPMENT
Sony 36" WEGA KV-36FS12 Monitor; Sony DA333ES Processor/Receiver; Panasonic CV-50 DVD Player using component outputs; Michael Green Revolution Cinema 6i Speakers (all five); Sony SA-WM40 Subwoofer.

RELATED REVIEWS

[an error occurred while processing this directive]


The Smashing Pumpkins 1991-2000: Greatest Hits Video Collection (2000)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson

For folks in my age bracket - our mid-thirties, that is - the grunge explosion of the early Nineties likely marks our generation’s last period of musical domination. Kurt Cobain was born a little less than three months earlier than I, and most of the prime grunge musicians were around the same age. As far as I’m concerned, it probably also was the last time I actively enjoyed popular artists. Today’s charts are dominated by rap and teen pop, neither of which does much for me. There are also still some rock bands out there, but they seem to be of the relentlessly moronic bent favored by Limp Bizkit and Blink-182. I guess bands like Creed hearken back to the heyday of grunge, but they do so with little apparent invention or spark.

(Pause so fans of the above-mentioned bands can send me nasty e-mails…)

So excuse me while I wax nostalgic for the grand old days when sharp guitar rock dominated the airwaves. Unfortunately, only a few of my faves remain with us. The end of Nirvana is well documented, though former drummer Dave Grohl continues to fly the flag surprisingly well with Foo Fighters. Happily, Pearl Jam are still with us, and though I’m not sure they really belong in the “grunge” category, Nine Inch Nails persist. (Since the “band” totally revolves around Trent Reznor, I suppose that they’ll still exist even if he formally drops the name.)

One fairly recent departure occurred in late 2000 when Smashing Pumpkins formally called it quits. This came as little surprise, since they’d gone through many rough times over the second half of the Nineties. Lead singer/guitarist/main writer Billy Corgan often spoke of the band’s limited shelflife, and he finally ended the group at that time.

Interestingly, after just a year off, Corgan has recently made a return to music. Along with original Pumpkins drummer Jimmy Chamberlin, he created a new band called Zwan. They’ve only played a few dates so far (as of January 2 2002) but look ready to release an album and tour more extensively in the future. From the little I’ve read, it seems like Zwan sounds a lot like the Pumpkins. That makes one wonder why the latter split, especially since Zwan includes two-thirds of the original band members who were still with the group at the end; only guitarist James Iha failed to hook up with Zwan. (Original bassist D’Arcy Wretzky split before 2000’s Machina: The Machines of God.)

Whatever the case may be, the Pumpkins are officially smashed, and the DVD of their Greatest Hits Video Collection provides an excellent Zwan song for the band. It contains 16 “standard” videos as well as two live cuts, an unreleased clip, an extended version of a video, and a “hidden” montage.

The DVD organizes the videos mainly by album, though it also provides a “Play All” option that runs through them in fairly chronological order. It covers the band’s five albums in the order the videos were released before it wraps with a “Live” section. Other than the “hidden” clip, the final two pieces appear in the “Extras” area. As such, I’ll consider all of those bits when I get to the DVD’s supplements; for the purpose of this review, I thought of the 18 videos available in the “Play All” area as the “main” program; everything else falls under “extras”.

The DVD starts with two cuts from the band’s debut, 1991’s Gish. “Siva” and “Rhinoceros” clearly established the group’s musical vibe, as the former’s a fairly straight-ahead rocker, while the latter mixes quiet and hard into one package. Gish doesn’t seem to get a lot of respect from fans, but I think it’s a decent album, and I like both of these songs. Neither offers the Pumpkins at their best, but they’re solid tunes that fit the Pumpkins pantheon well.

As for the videos, they’re exceedingly crude efforts. Shot on Super8 film, they look like death, and their content isn’t terribly compelling. They both combine lip-synched performance footage with some trippy visuals (for “Siva”) and some goofy in a park (for “Rhinoceros”). They’re interesting to see for archival reasons, but both videos are really fairly lame.

1993’s Siamese Dream provided the Pumpkins with their commercial breakthrough and established them as one of the prime exponents of Nineties rock. The lead-off track gave us a good reason for that, as “Cherub Rock” was rocking, catchy and endearing. The song also appeared as the album’s first video; unfortunately, it’s not as compelling as the tune itself. Another amateurish effort, “Cherub” looks like a grunge remake of The Blair Witch Project, as the band lip-synchs in the woods. Ugly and incoherent, the video goes nowhere.

Though fairly nonsensical itself, “Today” nonetheless offers a pretty entertaining video experience. The song’s not far from the “Rhinoceros” mold with its meld of hard and soft, but the video’s a big improvement. It shows Billy as ice cream man, and he picks up the band members as he drives around the desert. These shots are intercut with images of young folks getting passionate with each other. What’s the point? Why’s James wearing a dress? Who knows? It’s still a fun video, though the photographic quality hadn’t improved over the prior three; “Today” offers a pretty ugly visual experience.

With the fifth video in this package, we finally find a professional-looking piece. The nearly-acoustic “Disarm” is a good representation of the band’s quieter side, without the rocking elements found on tracks like “Today” and “Rhinoceros”; I wouldn’t go so far to call it “lovely” - nothing sung by Billy could ever merit that term - but it’s a very good song.

And it’s also an interesting video. As noted, it actually looks professional. Shot mainly in black and white, it shows the band as they lip-synch and float around a city. There actually is a meaning to it, though you’ll probably have to check out the audio commentary to figure out the intentions. With or without that insight, it remains a visually compelling and effective video.

More in the “fun” vein comes the final Siamese Dream clip, which accompanies “Rocket”. Taken literally for the video, we see some kids build a spaceship that they’ll fly to see the Pumpkins play. Intercut with those images are lip-synch performance shots of the band all dressed up in spacesuits. Good guitar-oriented song, entertaining video, but neither’s particularly special.

In late 1995, the Pumpkins produced their most massive work, the two-CD Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness. Whether a project of that scope was valid or just an indication that Billy’d started to believe the hype probably depends on your point of view. Personally, I think it’s a hit or miss record that’s good as it is but it likely would have been a great single-album. Of course, you can say that about almost any double-album, so it shouldn’t be seen as a slam on the Pumpkins.

To be certain, all five of the record’s singles were strong, starting with the excellent “Bullet With Butterfly Wings”. Sure, it wins the award for 1995’s most nonsensical song title, but it’s still a killer rocker that I think showed the Pumpkins at a higher level; while much prior material was good, “Butterfly” mixed a snarling tone, a grinding sound and a catchy tune to terrific effect.

As for the video, it’s not quite as successful. The clip suffers from “me too” syndrome as it looks like a mélange of other pieces. Essentially it felt like “Losing My Religion” meets “Smells Like Teen Spirit”. It’s interesting but too unoriginal to live up to the standards set by the song itself.

Much more interesting is “1979”. The song’s as close to bubblegum as the Pumpkins ever got, and it’s a bubbly and charming little pop tune. The video provides solid accompaniment for the tune as it shows the antics of some fairly obnoxious kids. Man, they look like little jerks, but I suppose you’re supposed to be annoying at that age. In any case, the visuals match the tune well, and it’s a good clip.

As we learn elsewhere on the DVD, the record company didn’t think “Zero” had much hit potential and were reluctant to pony up the dough for a video. Billy badgered some bucks out of them, which led to the fairly basic clip we find here. It intercuts lip-synched performances with some semi-perverse near-orgy imagery. It’s a decent video but not anything special.

The song itself, however, is one of the band’s best. Actually, the buzzing rocker was the one that got me interested in the band. I thought they seemed obnoxious at first - Billy’s voice isn’t exactly endearing - but after I saw them play “Zero” on Saturday Night Live, it stayed in my head for days, and I became open to their music. Initially, I didn’t care for much of Mellon Collie, but I gradually developed into a fan. So for the suits who didn’t want to pay for a “Zero” video: at least one of us thought the song was a hit!

While “Today” got tons of MTV airplay, the band had their biggest video hit with the next single from Mellon Collie, the semi-orchestral “Tonight, Tonight”. It’s a good song that comes across as absurd in a way - the combination of heavy drums with classical tones seems frightfully pretentious - but it works pretty well, largely due to Billy’s usually infallible pop sense.

However, it’s not the song alone that made the video so popular. The clip takes on the tone of Georges Melies’ seminal 1902 silent film A Trip to the Moon. It’s a tremendously clever and inventive piece that fully merits the praise it received. It’s fun and entertaining and also fits the song well.

In July 1996 - only a few days after I first saw them live - touring keyboardist Jonathan Melvoin overdosed on drugs, and drummer Jimmy Chamberlin was simultaneously ousted for his involvement in that episode and his own nasty habit. This means that we don’t see Chamerblin in the final Mellon Collie video, “Thirty-Three”. Another inventive clip, this one actually consists of jillions of still photos all connected to resemble moving pictures. It creates a compelling effect that makes the visuals all the more interesting. As for the song, it’s not my favorite, but it’s a decent slow number.

Though the Pumpkins used replacement drummers for the rest of the 1996-97 tour and for the 1998 trek behind that year’s Adore, they didn’t formally replace Chamberlin. When Bill Berry left REM, drum machines featured prominently on their next record, and the Pumpkins took the same route. Adore was easily the most different of their five albums, as Corgan went after a techno vibe for most of the album.

Personally, I didn’t think this was a successful experiment. It felt like change for the sake of change, without much creative need behind it, and Adore remains my least favorite Pumpkins album. Still, the record yielded a few good tunes, and happily, two of them appear here. “Ava Adore” was one of the few tracks that actually felt like a melding of classic Pumpkins with the synth vibe, as it provided one of the more intense songs on the album. It’s the most successful song from the record, and it offers a very cool video as well. Shot in a one-take mode, for the most part it simply combines lip-synching with some creepy visuals, but something about it works for reasons unknown. It’s a terrific clip that I count as one of the band’s best.

Musically, the poppy “Perfect” felt like a sequel to “1979”, so the band took that concept to a literal level for the song’s video. It acts as an actual sequel to the prior clip, as we see the kids of “1979” a few years later. It’s a clever concept that’s a lot of fun to watch. The song’s another solid and catchy number that stands as one of Adore’s few highlights.

After a few years apart, Chamberlin returned to the fold for 2000’s Machina: The Machines of God, but original bassist D’Arcy Wretzky departed. Former Hole player Melissa Auf der Maur replaced her for the album and ensuing tour. As noted on this DVD, the end finally came in November 2000, when the band played their last show.

With Chamberlin back behind the kit, Billy abandoned his drum machine and started to rock again. This change was best illustrated by the album’s first video, “The Everlasting Gaze”. Probably the hardest rocker on this DVD, the song declared itself with insistently fuzzy guitars and actually set too high a standard for the rest of Machina: the record’s opening track, I thought nothing that followed came across as quite so deliciously rough and intense.

While not one of the band’s best videos, “Gaze” was still a good piece. It went for a straight-ahead performance vibe, as it consisted solely of stylized lip-synch band shots. Despite the simplicity, the clip works, as the basic nature fits the power of the song.

More visually complex is the next video, “Stand Inside Your Love”. The black and white clip combines some of the usual lip-synch performance work - made more interesting via the odd dresses donned by the band - with a story that follows the Salome tale. It’s a little gratuitously gross - especially when we see the hairy obese shirtless man fondle his nipples - but it’s still a decent clip that seems generally compelling. The song itself is another iteration of Billy’s skill at straddling slow and fast all at once, and it works fairly well, though it’s not as good as “Gaze”.

When it came time for the final video from Machina, Billy knew it’d be the final video period for the Pumpkins. As such, he decided to go out with a bang. He hired director Jonas Ackerlund to create a harrowing look at junkies in love to accompany “Try, Try, Try”. The song’s a medium-tempo plea for perseverance that’s a good but not great number.

As for the video, it combines fairly standard lip-synch vocals from Billy with graphic imagery of two young drug abusers and their day to day lives. To be sure, this doesn’t make for pleasant viewing, but it’s one of the most powerful and rich videos you’ll ever see.

The main program of 1991-2000 concludes with two live performances, each from nearly opposite ends of the Pumpkins’ career. Siamese Dream’s “Geek USA” comes from an October 1993 club date. Apparently shot for a prospective TV program, the clip looks surprisingly good and professional. The song’s a good rocker, though not a great one. Oddly, the Pumpkins packed the stage with clowns; that motif gives the video an unusual tone, but it gets a bit annoying pretty quickly.

The end - both of the band and of this DVD - comes with the final track, a live performance of sdaj’s “An Ode to No One” from the band’s last concert ever at Chicago venue the Metro. I’ve heard some indications the whole show will be released at some point. If that’s true, I hope it looks better than this video. Hyperactively edited, the piece matches the frenetic spirit of the song, but it doesn’t provide a very good look at the actual performance. It’s a good version of the song, but the visuals aren’t very compelling.

Despite that and a few other minor misfires, 1991-2000 offers a consistently solid collection of videos. Unlike “let the music speak for itself” peers like Pearl Jam, the Pumpkins embraced the video format to good effect. That means we find quite a few very interesting clips in this entertaining and effective package.


The DVD Grades: Picture C / Audio B / Bonus A-

The Smashing Pumpkins 1991-2000 Greatest Hits Video Collection appears in an aspect ratio of 1.33:1 on this single-sided, double-layered DVD; due to those dimensions, the image has not been enhanced for 16X9 televisions. Actually, a few of the videos used differing ratios. “Zero” went for approximately 1.66:1, while “Ava Adore” and “Perfect” appeared to feature 1.78:1. “Thirty-Three” was actually windowboxed to maintain the dimensions of the still photography featured in the video. Nonetheless, 1.33:1 was easily the most common ratio found in this package.

Maybe someday I won’t gripe about how tough it is to cumulatively evaluate a set of music videos from a fairly wide span of time, but that won’t occur today. If anything, Pumpkins was one of the hardest DVDs to rate objectively. Many music videos use a variety of stylized tones; they may look odd, but they were supposed to look odd. That tendency appeared strongly in the Pumpkins’ videos, as they often showed various defects that clearly were intentional.

The earliest videos were the worst offenders in this regard. “Siva”, “Rhinoceros”, “Cherub Rock” and “Today” were all shot on low quality equipment; heck, a couple of them used Super 8, and “Cherub” was further mucked with to give it a rough look. Later videos used superior cameras, but some of them still went with degraded images to make the clips seem grittier and more stylized.

As such, 1991-2000 ran the gamut. “Siva” seemed exceedingly grainy and rough, with heavy colors. “Rhinoceros” came across as much less grainy - though that factor remained in evidence - and the hues looked tighter and more accurate as well for the most part. However, it still showed a mix of grit and specks, and the sloppy appearance maintained its hold.

Once we moved to Siamese Dream, I figured the videos would improve in quality. Alas, that would have to wait for Mellon Collie, as “Cherub Rock” kicked off the album with the ugliest video on the DVD. This isn’t a criticism per se, since the defects were clearly intentional; we learn more about them in the disc’s supplements. Nonetheless, print flaws reached an extreme with lots of grain and many marks, specks, and tears. Colors were very heavy and runny as well.

”Today” seemed awfully soft and fuzzy, and colors remained problematic; the hues appeared rather washed out and bland. In addition, lots of nicks, specks and grain marred the presentation. I understood the stylistic flaws in the preceding clips, but this one’s defects made less sense; they seemed to be nothing more than an artifact of the low budget. Frankly, the clip looked like it came from a fourth generation video master.

Happily, the situation improved considerably with “Disarm”. It still showed some grain, and it displayed moderate examples of jagged edges and moiré effects. However, the black and white photography demonstrated nice depth and contrast; for once, a video actually looked like it was created by a professional and not a pack of monkeys with cameras.

While “Rocket” didn’t match up to the level set by “Disarm”, it still surpassed the first four videos. It came across as somewhat soft and fuzzy, and its colors appeared moderately thick and runny at times. Still, it lacked the excessive flaws found on the early clips, so it seemed acceptable within that spectrum.

Mellon Collie was the band’s biggest album, and the videos marked an unsurprising escalation in budget. The record’s leadoff single, “Bullet With Butterfly Wings”, offered a dark and stylized production. Colors became very pale and desaturated, and much of the clip was intentionally unfocused. Significant flaws seemed absent, however, as it appeared to match the director’s intentions.

After that big budget spectacular, the band retrenched to a degree with the more modest “1979”. It went with a cheaper videotaped look that offered unintentionally flat colors as well as some examples of jagged edges, moiré effects, and artifacting. It still worked okay based on the source, but it marked a step back in quality.

As noted in the supplements, “Zero” was a pretty cheap affair because the studio didn’t want a video for it. Corgan asked for a small budget and this decent piece was the result. At times it appeared somewhat soft, and the palette tended toward the brown side. A few artifacts manifested themselves, but overall, the presentation seemed decent.

Another very stylized clip, “Tonight, Tonight” successfully replicated the look of century-old films. As such, it featured a flat palette as well as some moiré effects and jagged edges. However, it remained consistently clear and accurate and generally looked quite good.

More desaturated colors appeared during “Thirty-Three”, but they fit nicely with the style of the clip. The picture stayed fairly crisp and detailed throughout the video. Overall, it was one of the better looking pieces on the DVD.

”Ava Adore” went with a very yellowish palette at its start, but it offered varying tones across its running time. Otherwise, the video offered some light intentional flaws and somewhat soft focus at times, but it generally seemed acceptable and reasonably clear.

Shockingly, “Perfect” provided still more stylized colors. It also seemed a little soft at times, and some light edge enhancement appeared evident in shots of Corgan. This “sequel” to “1979” looked better than its predecessor, though, and it offered a fairly satisfying visual experience.

For the most part, “The Everlasting Gaze” went with a monochrome palette, though the backgrounds provided heavy green tones. It showed some of the standard light artifacts and fuzziness, but as a whole, it seemed very acceptable.

”Stand Inside Your Love” gave us a black and white clip that showed nicely deep and rich tones. It used some of the usual artistic softness that appeared on so many of these videos. However, it came across as quite clean and distinctive and seemed well executed.

The final true video, “Try, Try, Try”, seemed a little flat and drab. However, those tones made sense within its setting. The clip came across as slightly soft and fuzzy at times, and it displayed a fairly drab palette, but the overall effect seemed acceptably clear.

Surprisingly, of the two live clips, the older one looked much better. 1993’s “Geek USA” was a professional production that showed clean and accurate delineation at all times. Colors seemed crisp and fairly vivid, and the piece displayed none of the murkiness that often mars live videos.

On the other hand, December 2000’s “An Ode to No One” seemed soft and hazy. Colors came across as bland and muddy, and the whole thing appeared surprisingly rough and fuzzy. Various video artifacts popped up on occasion as well. It remained watchable, but I expected more from the band’s swan song.

Happily, audio quality on 1991-2000 was much more consistent, though some exceptions occurred within the Dolby Stereo soundtrack. When I first fired up the platter, I noticed that “Siva” seemed like glorified monaural; the audio seemed surprisingly centered. Actually, that’s a bit of an overstatement, but the DVD’s sound didn’t display the solid stereo spread to the guitars evident on the original album.

However, the situation improved with “Rhinoceros”, which showed much better stereo presence, and most of the remaining tracks followed suit. Most, but not all, however, as “Bullet With Butterfly Wings” displayed some weird issues. Different parts of the mix skipped from location to location. For example, at one point, Corgan’s vocals came from the right, but then they moved to the center and then skipped to the left. The prominence of his singing also varies. Other instrumentation jumped around as well, and on a couple of occasions, the bass response briefly collapsed completely!

I’d heard the song about a million times over the years, so I was pretty sure it wasn’t supposed to sound like this. Just to confirm, I popped out the CD, and it clearly showed that something was wrong with the video mix. There seemed to be no creative reason for the change - the altered audio doesn’t make sense within the context of the video - so I have no idea why “Bullet” displayed such a poor mix. However, it was the only real oddity in the bunch; despite the restricted stereo heard during “Siva”, the rest of the tracks offered fairly solid and clear stereo imaging.

Audio quality varied a bit but generally seemed strong. Some hiss appeared on a few occasions, particularly at the start of both “Today” and “Zero”. However, the music largely came across as clean and without any noticeable defects. The songs seemed to stick fairly closely to the original material. Dynamic range seemed quite good. Highs came across as clean and accurate, while bass response appeared nicely deep and rich. At times low-end could be a little boomy, but the Pumpkins’ albums often sound that way; Corgan seems enamored of midrange, as a lot of album tracks lack great bass. However, some exceptions exist, such as “Thirty-Three” and its extremely deep low-end response. Overall, the audio of 1991-2000 wasn’t as good as it could have been - especially in the case of the flawed “Bullet With Butterfly Wings” - but it seemed very acceptable for the most part.

Note that for the most part, I regarded the Dolby Stereo audio as a simple two-channel mix. That’s because the vast majority of the audio emanated from the front speakers. The soundfield featured proper usage of the center speaker, and it also offered light reinforcement of the music from the surrounds. On a couple of occasions - primarily during “Try, Try, Try” - some effects actually emanated from the rear speakers. However, for all intents and purposes, the vast majority of the track sounded like standard stereo, which was appropriate for this material.

So far I felt pleased with 1991-2000, but I really became enamored of the package when I started to go through the supplements. This is a truly terrific set that I thoroughly enjoyed. First of all, we get audio commentaries for all the studio songs as well as the live version of “Geek USA”; there’s no material offered for the live “An Ode to No One”. Band members Corgan and Iha appear on each of the commentaries, while Chamberlin shows up for all of the songs except “Disarm”, “Tonight, Tonight”, “Thirty-Three”, “Ava Adore”, and “Perfect”. His absence on the last three is logical since he wasn’t in the band when they were filmed, but he appears in the first two, so I don’t know why he fails to show up for those commentaries. In addition, the various directors crop up on all of the tracks except for “Today”; that one’s an unusual case that I’ll discuss later.

I found these commentaries to be uniformly excellent. From the directors’ perspectives, we learn lots of little tidbits about what they wanted to do and how they tried to achieve their goals. The band chime in with compelling information about the shoots themselves. Not surprisingly, Corgan offers the most information, especially because he was closely involved in the creative element for many of the videos. The guy seems unable to schmooze over issues, so he comes across as honest and upfront about problems, many of which appeared to revolve around missing band member D’Arcy. Corgan adds some excellent notes and insight, and Iha and Chamberlin also give us useful material as well, though they don’t say nearly as much. I especially liked Chamberlin’s remarks about the weird mindset he adopts on a video shoot that makes the oddest things seem perfectly normal. Ultimately, I really enjoyed these commentaries and highly recommend them.

If you use your remote to flip through the audio options, you’ll note that the DVD includes four tracks for each song. However, most only use two of these: one for the music and one for the commentary. Nonetheless, we do find a few exceptions to this rule.

”1979” stands as the only song to utilize all four tracks. In addition to the standard commentary and the music, we find “Documentary Audio” - which I’ll discuss when I go over that part of the DVD - and “Lost Tapes Commentary”. In the latter, we learn that the original material filmed for the video disappeared due to a stupid accident, and we hear the particulars of what happened after that. It’s a quite interesting and unusual tale.

The only other tune to include a third audio track is “Today”, which provides something obscurely called “Jakeez Betbetba”. This is another commentary from the alleged director of the video. Interviewed on the phone; he tells us he did the clip in 1999 and he basically babbles for the piece’s running time. It’s an odd affair.

Additional extras accompany the various songs. For eight of the tunes, we discover outtakes. These appear for “Siva”, “Rhinoceros”, “Cherub Rock”, “Today”, “Disarm”, “Bullet With Butterfly Wings”, “Zero” and “The Everlasting Gaze”. As one might assume, these consist of unused material from each shoot, and they’re compiled in such a way that they actually create alternate versions of the videos. Probably my favorite is “Gaze”, as the outtakes concentrate on isolated shots of the bandmembers as they destroy their instruments. Overall, these segments are very cool to see.

A few of the other songs include documentaries for the videos in question. We get this kind of material for “1979”, “Tonight, Tonight”, “Thirty-Three”, “Adore”, “Perfect” and “Stand Inside Your Love”. Mostly these clips show behind the scenes footage from the shoots, but a few offer more diverse content. “Adore” provides a quality degeneration progression meant for an unused version of the video, while “Stand” gives us some storyboards. Though it’s a stretch to call these “documentaries”, they’re still fun to watch.

As mentioned earlier, “1979” features audio meant just to accompany the documentary. Basically this means we get the commentary already heard along with some of the natural audio from the shoot. For instance, we can listen to the actual Pumpkins performance sound taken from the set. It’s decent as it is, but the “documentary audio” would work better without any vestiges of the commentary.

”Rocket” provides an alternate performance cut. Basically that means we see just the band’s part of the video; we don’t watch the bits with the kids anymore. Some of the other “outtakes” serve the same purpose; for example, “Siva” shows just the lip-synched material without the trippy interludes. Nonetheless, the isolated version of “Rocket” is interesting and useful.

One note about the outtakes and documentaries and the commentaries: although you’d think the remarks from the latter would best fit the final videos, that’s not the case. All of the commentaries match up most closely with the various unused footage. That’s a surprise, but it’s cool nonetheless, as it adds some depth to the material.

Although we got no documentary or outtakes for “Try, Try, Try”, we do find an extended version of the video. Try - A Short Film lasts for 15 minutes and nine seconds and greatly expands upon the video version. It features narration from the female junkie as well as an alternate non-vocal mix of “Try, Try, Try”. Frankly, I think the piece works best within the shorter setting; the longer one seems too literal, and it tells the tale with excessive clarity, as it leaves little room for interpretation. One interesting note: the short film cut offers a significantly different ending to the tale.

Also in the “Extras” department, I Am One provides a previously unreleased video. The song comes from Gish, and the video itself looks a lot like the other clips from that album. It’s a live performance piece, except the audio emanates from the original studio material. It’s crudely shot and not terribly interesting, but it’s still a nice bonus.

Finally, we get an Easter egg to wrap up the package. To get “Untitled”, highlight “Extras” from the main page and click to the left. That’ll activate this montage of recording studio footage. With accompaniment from the final mix of “Untitled”, we watch Billy, James and Jimmy as they create the song. Since we get no discussion or insight into the process, it’s a pretty dull addition.

But I suppose I can forgive one misstep in this otherwise stellar package. Most collections of music videos are basic affairs, but The Smashing Pumpkins 1991-2000 Greatest Hits Video Collection helps show how well the DVD format can be used. Inevitably, it’ll elicit comparisons to the Beastie Boys Video Anthology, largely regarded as the gold standard by which DVDs from this genre are measured. To be sure, that’s a fine set, but I think the Pumpkins package outdoes it. While the Beasties offer the greatest quantity, the Pumpkins win due to quality. There’s a lot of fairly useless stuff on the Beasties’ set, but 1991-2000 includes very little material that falls into that category.

Granted, I’m not an impartial observer, as I much prefer the Pumpkins to the Beasties, but I still think it’s a superior package in most ways. The Pumpkins’ videos are consistently interesting and compelling and inventive, and the songs are mainly strong. Visual quality is erratic due to the nature of the original videos, whereas sound seems to accurately represent the source recordings except for a few exceptions, the most notable coming from the bizarrely flawed audio for “Bullet With Butterfly Wings”.

1991-2000 packs in a slew of terrific extras as well, and that’s the area that really sets this package above the competition. I struggled to work through all of the Beasties’ stuff; some of it was interesting, but much of it was pedestrian or even boring. Not so for the Pumpkins. When I started to check out the supplements, it was late and I needed to go to bed. I planned to just listen to the first commentary or two to get a taste. However, the pieces were so terrific that I couldn’t shut off the TV; I remained with the disc until I’d gone through the whole thing.

If voluntary sleep deprivation doesn’t offer a strong recommendation, I don’t know what will. I think The Smashing Pumpkins 1991-2000 Greatest Hits Video Collection is the best package of its sort on the market, and it’s one on a short list of the top musical sets period. Already-established Pumpkins fans should run to the store to get it, and other folks should give it a look as well; considering the excellent music, inventive videos and fascinating supplements, this one might win over non- believers, especially with a bargain price of less than $20.

Viewer Film Ratings: 3.9545 Stars Number of Votes: 44
295:
44:
1 3:
02:
101:
View Averages for all rated titles.