Ben wrote:No, droo, it's not.
I've spoken at length about the Nicholas Hammond/1970s/80s Spidey series. I have no idea why Sony - who own them - don't put out a "trilogy" box set, at the very least, comprising of the feature pilot and the two later "features" that were issued overseas and made up of two, two-part epiosdes.
Because Sony is lame, that's why!
But seriously, it could be that someone in Marvel management (the boneheads that are RUINING the comic book line) is blocking release of the TV series because they feel it "doesn't suit the modern sensibilities of the character."
(They had little choice about the Disney release of the 1960s Spider-Man and 1990s Fantastic Four animated series. This is one time I applaud Disney's ruthlessness in releasing these shows to DVD without Marvel's say-so. At least Stan Lee was contacted and wrote a nice introduction the '60s Spider-Man set.)
In other words, the 1970s Spidey isn't serious (dreary and depressing) enough!
Sony may own the TV series and live-action motion pictures but Marvel ultimately controls the character. Marvel's last lawsuit against Sony was successful but it was almost pointless.
Pretty much all the Marvel characters that would make decent movies have already had their films shot. Only Spidey and X-Men have had decent box office success. Hulk, which should have been a shoe-in IF they had stuck to the original comic book origin(!), was a bust. Everything else has been mediocrely successful to forgettable. I cringe to think what will happen to Captain America (who's already been KILLED in the comics) and have little hope that Iron Man will be handled well.
I've gotta admit that the last thing I'm looking forward to on home videoo is a decent release of the 1960s Marvel Superheroes animated series featuring The Hulk, Captain America, Thor and Sub-Mariner. I've got the '67 Spider-Man series set but could care less about the rest of the Marvel animated output. The original series are still the best.