Hogan's Heroes - Season 2
Hogan's Heroes DVDs

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Product Description:
Fall in line for a second hilarious season of laughs starring the
ragtag band of wwii pows known as hogans heroes! its a blitzkrieg of
laughs with all 30 episodes from season two. Studio: Paramount Home
Video Release Date: 05/01/2007 Starring: Bob Crane Robert Clary Run
time: 762 minutes Rating: Nr
Amazon.com:
A top 10 show in its first season (a top 20 show in its second),
Hogan's Heroes, like Gilligan's Island, got little love from critics
during its seven-year run, but it would come to be ranked among TV's
guiltiest pleasures. Hogan's Heroes has gotten something of a bad
rap. It is not a situation comedy set in a concentration camp. It
is, instead, set in a P.O.W. camp, where Col. Hogan (Bob Crane, a
former top radio jock, in his star-making role) and his men "trick
the dumb Germans," to quote the late Crane's former wife, Sigrid
Valdis, in her enlightening commentary on the episode, "Hogan Gives
a Birthday Party." While Valdis reveals that the film Von Ryan's
Express was a key inspiration for the series, the show seems to
takes its cue from Billy Wilder's Stalag 17, with its blend of
comedy (albeit more broad than darkly cynical) and espionage action.
Though camp commandant Col. Klink (Werner Klemperer, who would win
an Emmy for his career-defining role) was, in the words of one
character, "a bubble-headed fool," Hogan's Heroes was not quite a
burlesque of bad taste.
Seemingly in response to wide-ranging outrage over the show's
misunderstood premise (a Mad magazine parody at the time was
brutal), there are some bracing dramatic moments that cut through
the comedy. In "Operation Briefcase," Hogan is recruited to assist
an attempt to assassinate Hitler. Hogan disdainfully tells the
German plotter, "It's the least you can do, considering you're the
same bunch of guys who put him in business." In the episode "Will
the Real Adolf Hitler Please Stand Up?" Hogan explodes at one of his
men when he imitates Hitler. "Imitating that nut in Berlin," he
fumes. "It's not all that funny." But somehow, Hogan's Heroes is,
thanks to Crane and Klemperer ("You talk about two people born to
play a part," remarks Valdis), not to mention John Banner as the
jowl-cheeked buffoon, Sgt. Schultz, and the rest of the crack
ensemble, including real-life concentration camp survivor Robert
Clary as LeBeau, Richard Dawson as Newkirk, Ivan Dixon as "Kinch,"
and Valdis herself, who debuted this season as Klink's secretary,
Hilda, she of the scene-stealing tight sweaters and low-cut peasant
blouses, and whose chief dialogue consisted of "Col. Hogan to see
the commandant." The extras are a retro blast. The most bizarre is a
commercial in which Carol Channing is smuggled into the barracks to
enjoy a Jello dessert with Hogan and company. --Donald Liebenson