I remember taping all the episodes of seasons 1 and 2 off the air, then as things went on I taped the show less and less.
Ultimately, I never went back and watched ANY of the taped episodes again, anyway, so I think the DVDs would be a waste of money for me.
I often work best with background noise, which leads to DVD boxed sets on my birthday/Christmas lists.
I only remember a few highlights from the show; the episode where Lois visits a universe without a Superman and plants the seed in alternate-Clark's mind to maybe be a hero,
This was a Tempus episode in season 3. Tempus was by far the best original villain in the show.
the "Panic in the Sky" remake
For a second, I thought you were talking the Superman comic "Panic In The Sky" involving Braniac, and not the Reeves TV show.
and the neat shot at the end of an early episode where we learn Clark once named his boyhood treehouse hangout "The Fortress of Solitude." On the whole, though, I don't much go in for "relationship" shows...romance is fine, but endless chattering and heart-to-heart discussions about what people feel is like watching grass grow. That's why I always hoped either Frank or Joyce would get shot before their next hotel rendezvous on "Hill Street Blues."
I remember wishing L&C would focus more on action and super-heroics. Then when it happened, things actually worse.
The key was the bad guys and challenges. When there was an interesting challenge, the romance fed off that and made for some fine stories. When there wasn't, it fell apart. No one wants to see a romance with a perfect couple, and most typical romantic challenges fall flat when Superman is so atypical. "Just put a lump of coal in my stocking and I'll take care of our Christmas money problems for the foreseeable future. I'll build that new house for us in 5 seconds flat!" Bad guys aren't just McGuffins to squeeze in between bedroom scenes.
Oh and it was fun watching Terri Hatcher pretend to be a Bond girl in a dream sequence, prefiguring her appearance in "Tomorrow Never Dies."
Where she pretended to be a Bond girl again. :lol:
Discounting Moneypenny, the only real Bond girl in that movie was Michelle Yeoh. But I digress...