Showing posts with label The Great American Bash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Great American Bash. Show all posts

Monday, 4 August 2014

WWE United We Slam: The Best of The Great American Bash DVD Review

WWE's United We Slam: The Best of The Great American Bash is out now on DVD and Blu Ray, available from www.wwedvd.co.uk. The three disc set, features some of the biggest and best clashes to take place at NWA and WCW's versions of the PPV. WWE Hall of Famer Dusty Rhodes is on hand to present the set, which includes matches from WCW greats like Chris Jericho, Eddie Guerrero, Bret "The Hitman" Hart, The Road Warriors and Terry Funk.


It would be rude to start this review, without talking about United We Slam's presenter, if you wheel, "The American Dream" himself, Dusty Rhodes. Dusty pops up every now again, much more regularly than we have seen on previous releases, to give the viewer some background information on some of the feuds and matches, as well as any changes in WCW that ocurred in between. What Dusty lacks in coherence, he more than makes up for in sheer hilariousness (That's a word now). Every single scene he's part of had me in absolute stiches. His introduction to Mike Awesome and "Diamond" Dallas Page's Ambulance Match is perhaps the best thing I've ever witnessed on a wrestling DVD. 




The setting of the NXT Arena at Full Sail University works much better than what we saw when Booker T presented WCW's Greatest PPV Matches from the cheap seats before a Raw taping, as the special set they've created gives the segments a unique feel. We're also treated to Dusty putting down some commentary (alongside Larry Zybyszko and others) on some of the earlier matches on the set, which once again is unintentionally hilarious and extremely entertaining. My only complaint here would be, that I wish these commentary tracks had been optional, as it would have been nice to view these matches as they had originally aired.

Kicking off the matches on the set, is 1985's NWA World Heavyweight title encounter between Ric Flair and Nikita Koloff. Ric Flair is made to look like an absolute star throughout the match, not only arriving by arriving in the helicopter, but clearly outwrestling Volkoff for the majority of the match. The match is crisp and technical as you'd expect, with a slow and old school (in both storyline and execution), that may not appeal to someone only exposed to what's on offer in 2014. A botched finish is perhaps the only thing that holds this match back. 




A tag team encounter between Rock N' Roll Express and The Minnesota Wrecking Crew from the 12th night of the 1986 tour, similarly to the previous match is very of it's time. The finish is very done, with lots of exciting near falls, but your reaction will depend on your opinion on the use of time limits.

From the same show, Dusty Rhodes and Ric Flair put on a classic NWA World Heavyweight title bout. The storytelling is sublime, with Flair working Rhodes' leg and Rhodes' selling it for all it's worth. The crowd is completely into everything each man does, and by the time Rhodes launches into his comeback sequence, the crowd is red hot. A match that should be studied by any wrestler who wants to get a crowd invested in their matches. 




Flair and Rhodes face off again next, this time as part of a War Games Match from 1987, with Rhodes joined by The Road Warriors and Nikita Koloff, whilst Flair teams with Arn Anderson, Tully Blanchard, Lex Luger & J.J. Dillon. A truly brutal encounter, that is put together superbly, the hatred between the men in the ring, emanates through the screen. It is a shame however that the footage is fairly poor, with a nasty buzz running throughout the footage. 

Sting and Lex Luger team up to take on The Road Warriors in 1988  (strangely not at The Great American Bash), in a match that really wasn't for me. As soon as Hawk no-sold at piledriver from Sting, who promptly no sold as suplex himself, I was instantly switched off. No selling can work extremely well, however I think that no selling a Piledriver is just plain stupid, pretty much ruining the move for anyone else who planned to use it later on in the show. 





Starting Disc 2, Sting puts in a much better performance against The Great Muta from 1989 "Glory Days". The two men put on a much flashier match than previously seen on the set, which is refreshing after a number of old-school style belt. But it quite simply isn't long enough for the men to tell the story they are attempting to tell, it could easily have gone another five or ten minutes, which would have made the finish make a lot more sense. 

However, all those problems seem to fade away fairly quickly during the next match. Of course, it's Terry Funk vs Ric Flair from the same show. It's everything you'd expect it to be and more, telling a great story in the ring, whilst being marvelously brutal at the same time. The crowd is red, red hot, building towards an electric finish. One of those matches that every wrestling fan should watch at least once. 




In the only repeat from WWE's WCW's Greatest PPV Matches DVD release from earlier in the year, Ric Flair is back again, this time against Sting from 1990 "New Revolution". I really wanted to like this match, but I didn't. It's not particularly a bad match, it's just not very good. The psychology of Flair working Sting's leg to build for the Figure Four Leg Lock is completely void as Sting barely sells the leg, in fact Sting barely sells anything. I counted about five no-sells from Sting in this match, including one when Flair irish whips him into the barricade, and after the second they became completely meaningless as the crowd stopped popping for them. The finish is the highlight of the bout, but again is undercut by Sting refusing to sell his injured knee. Perhaps this bout is harmed by coming straight after Flair v Funk.

That makes it even more confusing that WWE decided to put the Fabulous Freebirds vs The Steiner Brothers from earlier in the 1990 show, after that shows main event. It's a decent slice of tag team action, showcasing The Steiner Brothers superbly, as they pull of a number of good looking moves, including a Tiger Bomb and a Frakensteiner from Scott. The Freebird also have sparkly trousers on, everyone loves Sparkly trousers, right?




There's more tag team wrestling up next, from 1992 as Barry Windham and Dustin Rhodes take on Steve Austin & Rick Rude. It's another old school tag team bout, with the crowd completely invested in the four guys in the ring. There's nothing particularly flashy, but the story told in the ring is a good one and by the time the hot tag hits I was on the edge of my seat. 


From the same show, Vader and Sting go to war in a belter of a bout over the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. These two character fit perfectly together, both working their specific role fantastically, creating a dramatic and entertaining bout. Sting has improved so much since his previous bout with Flair and looks every inch the star that WCW wanted him to be and despite some questionable headgear on his walk to the ring, Vader is right up there with him. The finish is clever and feels fresh and the crowd buys into every second of it. I'll definitely hunt out some more of their matches after this one. 




We head into the third disc, as The Great American Bash emerges from a three year absense with Ric Flair taking on "Macho Man" Randy Savage in 1995. It's a bout that brings a lot more of a "sports-entertainment" style than the previous matches, but still delivers, in buckets. The story telling is what you'd expect from these two, with Flair's offence looking even better because Savage bothers to sell it! I was completely drawn into the drama, involving Savage's Dad, Lanny Poffo, and Flair's dastardly actions made it easier to cheer on Savage, even from behind a TV Screen and nine years.

The only promo segment on the set is, the historically significant appearance of Scott Hall and Kevin Nash from the 1996. Just one month before the formation of the nWo, the pair talk about the upcoming bout at Bash at the Beach, with Hall in particular cutting a belter of a promo. It's always fun to see Eric Bischoff take a nasty bump through a table as well. A worthy inclusion.




1998's Falls Count Anywhere Main Event between Randy Savage and Diamond Dallas Page follows on, I was so so disapointed with this match, as it start really nice with Savage working over DDP's taped ribs, which DDP sells really nicely, however all of a sudden it just goes completely nuts. It's clear that ECW was begining to have an influence on WCW's style, as we get a brawl around the arena, a piledriver to the referee and then a brawl through a picnic based set. Yes, a picnic area that just happened to be at the top of the stage. It was actually a pretty good match, until one of the booking team lost their mind.

It's then onto a trifeca of Cruiserweight matches, kicking off with 1998's opening match pitting Psiscosis against "Ultimate" Dragon (Obviously Ultimo Dragon would have been too mental a name for WCW's fanbase to handle) This wasn't exactly what I had been expecting from two lucha based wrestlers, as it's slow and really quite dull for the first ten minutes. It does pick up towards the end, as we get the customary lucha flips and such, but it doesn't make up for those first ten minutes. 




The compulsory Eddie Guerrero match on WCW set see's the WWE Hall of Famer take on Chavo Guerrero, Jr, from 1998, in a match that is, to be brutally honest, a bit shit. Without any explanation of their feud, it is really difficult to work out who is the heel, as they both use under handed means throughout the match. The crowd couldn't give a rats arse either, as they alternatively chant "Boring" and "We Want Flair". It's neither mans best match, that's for sure.

A similarly compulsory Chris Jericho match features Jericho taking on Dean Malenko for the vacant Crusierweight Championship, also from 1998. This was probably my favourite out of three cruiserweight bouts, until the finish that is. The action is crisp and technical as you would expect, with a number of very nice reversals done at a decent pace. The match is let down by very little crowd reaction, apart from a tremendous roar for Malenko's Texas Cloverleaf and a dodgy finish, that really had no place on one of WCW's biggest PPVs. 




Another match from 1998, see's Two All-Star team square up in a truly terrible match. Hulk Hogan and Bret Hart taking on Randy Savage and Roddy Piper, on paper, at least, is a dream match. Then you remember this was WCW in 1998. Both teams work as heels, the action is sloppy and I was bored after about three minutes. 

It doesn't get much better as we jump to an Ambulance Match from 2000 as Diamond Dallas Page battles Mike Awesome. The crowd are so so dead, with run ins from Miss Hancock and Kimberly getting the biggest reaction of the night, because legs and tits. The finish is a completely pointless swerve, that makes absoutuely no sense at all. Just awful. 



The final match on the set is the Main Event from 2000, as Kevin Nash challenges Jeff Jarrett for the WCW World Heavyweight title. The match is over booked to shite, with all of The Filthy Animals knocking around ringside for some reason or another. Jarrett spends the entire match working the leg, even having Nash in the Figure Four Leg Lock for what felt like an age, due to Nash's piss poor selling, only for Nash to jump up a few minutes later and decide he didn't need to sell the leg at all. The finish is another over-booked, swervy mess. 


Finally...


If this set had only been the first two discs, it would have been infinitely improved. With the exception of Savage vs Flair, the rest of the third disc either doesn't match expectations or is complete bilge. I certainly struggled to watch the rest of the set. 

First two discs are the complete opposite, presenting a series of classic and enjoyable matches, most notably Dusty Rhodes vs Ric Flair, Flair vs Terry Funk and Sting vs Vader. Which were really a pleasure to sit through, with the added bonus of Dusty Rhodes' hilarious introductions and commentary.

Perhaps, the best selling point for this DVD is that there isn't a single Lex Luger match in sight. If you like WCW, but hate Lex Luger, this could be the set for you.

Monday, 19 May 2014

WWE WCW's Greatest Pay-Per-View Matches Volume 1 DVD Review

WWE's WCW's Greatest Pay-Per-View Matches Volume 1 is out now on DVD and Blu Ray, available from www.wwedvd.co.uk, currently priced at £19.99 for DVD and £22.99 for Blu Ray. The three disc set, looks at the greatest matches that happened on WCW Pay-Per-View and is presented by former Five Time WCW World Heavyweight Champion Booker T. The set looks at the period between November 1987 and March 2001 and features some of the best wrestlers to work for WCW and the NWA during that time, including Chris Jericho, Jushin Thunder Liger, Bret Hart, Ricky Steamboat and The Road Warriors.



     WWE's WCW's Greatest Pay-Per-View Matches is a three disc DVD set that chronicles some of the most important bouts to have taken place on WCW's Pay-Per-View broadcasts. Bouts from the likes of Starrcade, The Great American Bash and Halloween Havoc feature heavily throughout as presenter Booker T leads us through the action. 


 

     As a presenter Booker is a solid choice for this set, as he not only offers knowledge on a large period of WCW history, but also brings a strong energy and enthusiam to his segments, which is always a bonus!



     The matches kick off with Ric Flair challenging Ron Garvin for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship inside a Steel Cage. It's a decent bout, but Garvin's lack of connection with the crowd, means they are fully behind Flair throughout, which harms the overall feel. In contrast the crowd clearly adores Dusty Rhodes as he takes on Barry Windham for the United States Heavyweight Championship in a bout from The Great American Bash 1988. Whilst the pace is slow by today's standards, this match still has a lot to offer, telling a good story, whilst also containing some decent spots like Rhodes delivering a diving cross body. It's a shame so much of the bout is built around Windham "Claw" submission hold as the move does nothing for me what so ever. Five months later Dusty Rhodes teams with Sting to take on The Road Warriors at Starrcade 1988, in an average tag bout, that is let down by some messy action at points and a frustrating finish. 



     After a string of average matches, this set really kicks into gear with Ric Flair and Ricky Steamboat's classic bout from Chi-Town Rumble in February 1989. I absolutely adore this match and for me it is an instant five stars. Both men work together perfectly throughout, creating a must-watch wrestling match. The only downside is the camera's occasionally deciding to show SOME GUYS who play some sport in the US, instead of the action. The match that had to follow was always going to struggle in comparison, and whilst Lex Luger and Flyin' Brian have surprisingly good chemistry, Luger's atrocious selling kept pulling me out of the action. The final match on the disc see's Sting challenging for Ric Flair's NWA World Heavyweight Championship. The bout features solid wrestling throughout, with strong psychological elements thrown in, based around Sting's injured knee. It is let down however by Sting rarely selling the knee, and relying on the commentary team to remind the audience after it is pretty much forgotten by the wrestlers in the last five minutes of the match.

      The second disc kicks off with a dull Steel Cage bout between Lex Luger and Barry Windham. It's made even more boring by an apathetic crowd chanting for Ric Flair, who had recently departed WCW for a run in the WWF, throughout the contest. The finish is also baffling, with the steel cage gimmick barely being used throughout the match.In contrast, Flyin' Brian and Jushin Thunder Liger's bout over the Light Heavyweight Championship from Superbrawl II, starts off with a crowd that couldn't care less about the contest and finishes with them gripped by the action taking place within the ring. It's a well paced, epic, light heavyweight contest. with a  mixture of crisp chain wrestling and high flying spots. Only Brian not selling the leg that Liger worked early on in the match would stop me giving this bout the perfect five stars. As usual Jesse Ventura's commentary has been turned down, although it can still be heard feintly if listening through headphones, which is slightly distracted, as is seeing Ventura talking at ringside and not being able to hear his voice. It's the same for the following match, as Jim Ross goes solo again as Sting's Squadron (Barry Windham, Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat, "The Natural" Dustin Rhodes, Sting & Nikita Koloff) battle Paul E. Dangerously's Dangerous Alliance ("Stunning" Steve Austin, "Ravishing" Rick Rude, Arn Anderson, Larry Zbyszko & "Beautiful" Bobby Eaton) I enjoyed this match a lot more here than on the War Games boxset as it benefits from being the only match using the gimmick here. It's a bloody, violent battle with Austin and Windham both bleeding buckets. There's strong storyline elements thrown in as well, with a lively crowd making this a compelling battle. 


        The set continues with Cactus Jack and Vader's Texas Death match from Halloween Havoc in 1993. The match is a superb example of Hardcore wrestling done right, as the two men beat the shit into each other for twenty minutes, with some great spots involved. The gimmick harms the match however, with rest periods in between the ten counts, and a bizarre finish, if this was a straight last man standing bout it would have been a lot more enjoyable.





       Ricky Steamboat and Steve Austin battle over the US Heavyweight Championship in a sound Veteran vs. Up and Comer contest, with Steamboat allowing Austin to look like a star. The finishing sequence is exhilirating, how WCW and Eric Bischoff didn't recognise they had not only a breakout star in Steve Austin but the future biggest star the industry has ever produced is anyones guess. In the final match of Disc 2, Hulk Hogan's soap opera style theatrics combine with Ric Flair's technical to create a compelling World title bout at Halloween Havoc in 1994. Throw in Mr. T as Special Guest Referee and surround the ring with a Steel Cage and it seems like WCW is onto a winner here. That is until an overbooked ending including Jimmy Hart removing Sensuous Sherri's skirt, a run in from Sting and masked man with a lead pipe, make the final few moments a little tedious to watch. 

Disc three kicks off with one of the biggest moments in wrestling history as The Outsiders and their mystery partner take on Lex Luger, Sting and Randy Savage. This match has been present on a number of different DVD sets, and whilst the action isn't particularly great during the actual match, this one is all about the finish. The crowd reaction is always good to see. 


 
           Diamond Dallas Page and Randy Savage's No Disqualification tangle from Spring Stampede is a fun bout. Whilst the action isn't always as crisp as it should be, there's enough to keep the attention of the viewer throughout. I coud've done without the strange goings on after the bout though. Rey Misterio Jr. vs. Eddy Guerrero from Halloween Havoc 1997 is a quality Lucha Libre style bout, with all the flips and tricks that you'd expect. There's a lot of really pretty wrestling here, and stuff that still makes me say "Wow" in 2014, so I can only imagine what watching in 1997 would have been like. The finish is truly spectacular. 

            Bret Hart and Randy Savage's bout from Slamboree 1998 is as dull as dishwater as the two go through the motions for 15 minutes, before a convulted ending reveals this bout as a set up for another Hogan vs Savage feud. WWE obviously wanted to include a Bret Hart match on the set, and with Hart finest PPV matches for WCW coming against Ric Flair, who we'd already seen four times and Chris Benoit, it's almost as if they picked a match at random. From the bizarre Road Wild PPV (held at motor bike festival, because why wouldn't you hold a wrestling PPV there) we get Chris Jericho defending the Cruiserweight title against Juventud Guerrera in a decent cruiserweight bout. Jericho does his best to gain some heat from an audience that isn't made up of wrestling fans. There's some good wrestling, but this bout lacks the fire needed to take it too the next level, with a crowd that couldn't care less not helping at all. Goldberg's World Heavyweight title defense against Diamond Dallas Page is one of the best bouts of Golberg's career. The psychology is strong, with Goldberg's selling also very good throughout, making the finish mean something! The face vs. face type matches doesn't always pay off but it works very well here.


       


     After the mess that was Hulk Hogan exiting WCW at Bash at the Beach 2000, Booker T and Jeff Jarrett attempt to rescue the situation in the main event of that PPV. Unfortunately the pair are let down, by an over booked mess of a finish and a random brawl around the arena in poor rip off of what ECW had been doing for sometime. When the two are allowed the wrestle the action is good, but they don't get very long to show us what they can do. A six man ladder match for the Cruiserweight title has some really good spots in it, with Shane Helms and Jamie Knoble both standing out. However, once again some bizarre booking, with the match presented as a tag team match that only one man can win, and eventually having it won by two men, and a dodgy first five minutes, harm what could have beena rival to WWF's TLC matches at the time. The final match on the set, is the final match WCW ever presented on PPV as Scott Steiner and Diamond Dallas Page collide in a Falls Count Anywhere bout over the World Heavyweight Championship. For what it's worth, this is a sound contest, with some good brawling presented by both men. Both Steiner and Page play their roles very well, it's just a shame we get another over booked mess of a finish, but hey that was WCW for you!

     Overall, this was fine three disc set that showcased a good cross section of WCW's PPV offerings, whilst they may not all be classic matches like Flair vs. Steamboat, the DVD does flow very nicely from one match to the other without an over whelming "burn out" feel. It's clear that WWE wanted to make sure everyone of WCW's big name stars were on this DVD, rather than simpy the Best matches from WCW PPV's otherwise we would have had a whole lot more of Ric Flair! I would have liked to have seen a few more added features like interviews with the wrestlers involved in the matches and maybe some new commentary from those involved (Steve Austin and Ricky Steamboat commentating on their match would have been a nice touch) to make this set stand out from the content already available on the WWE Network (for a cheaper price a month, for a lot more content) as Booker T's introduction aren't quite enough to shed the extra cash. If you're a completist buy the set, if you're not check out the higher reccomended matches on the WWE Network.

Content Listing



Vignette 1: Then, Now, Forever.

Vignette 2: Classic WCW PPV Moments

Segue 1: The Evolution of Pay-Per-View


Match 1: Steel Cage Match for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship: "The Nature Boy" Ric Flair vs. "The Man With The Hands of Stone" Ron Garvin (C) - NWA Starrcade "Chi-Town Heat", 26th November 1987

Match 2: Singles Match for the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship: "The American Dream" Dusty Rhodes vs. Barry Windham (C) with "The Executive Director of the Four Horseman" James J. Dillon - NWA The Great American Bash "The Price Of Freedom", 10th July 1988

Match 3: Tag Team Match for the NWA World Tag Team Championships: Sting & "The American Dream" Dusty Rhodes vs. "The Legion of Doom" The Road Warriors with "Precious" Paul Ellering (C) - NWA Starrcade "True Gritt" - 26th December 1988

Segue 2: A Hall of Fame Rivalry

Match 4: Singles Match for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship: Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat vs. "Nature Boy" Ric Flair (C) with Hiro Matsuda - NWA Chi-Town Rumble, 20th February 1989

Match 5: Singles Match for the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship: Flyin' Brian vs. Lex Luger (C) - NWA Halloween Havoc, 28th October 1989

Match 6: Singles Match for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship: Sting with Junkyard Dog, Paul Orndorff, Scot Steiner & Rick Steiner vs. "Nature Boy" Ric Flair (C) NWA The Great American Bash "New Revolution", 7th July 1990

Disc 2


Segue 3: Everything to Gain

Match 7: Steel Cage Match for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship: United States Heavyweight Champion Lex Luger vs. Barry Windham. WCW The Great American Bash, 14th July 1991

Match 8: Singles Match for the WCW World Light Heavyweight Championship: Flyin' Brian vs. Jushin Thunder Liger (C). WCW Superbrawl II, 29th February 1992 

Match 9: War Games Match: The Dangerous Alliance ("Stunning" Steve Austin, "Ravishing" Rick Rude, Arn Anderson, Larry Zbyszko & "Beautiful" Bobby Eaton) with Paul E. Dangerously & Madusa  vs. Sting's Squadron (Barry Windham, Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat, "The Natural" Dustin Rhodes, Sting & Nikita Koloff). WCW WrestleWar "War Games", 17th May 1992.

Segue 4: Spin the Wheel, Make the Deal

Match 10: Spin the Wheel, Make the Deal Texas Death Match: WCW World Heavyweight Champion Big Van Vader with Harley Race vs Cactus Jack. WCW Halloween Havoc, 24th October 1993.

Match 11: Singles Match for the WCW United States Heavyweight Championship: Ricky "The Dragon" Steamboat vs. "Stunning" Steve Austin (C), WCW Bash At The Beach, 17th July 1994

Match 12: Steel Cage Match for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship: "Nature Boy" Ric Flair with Sensuous Sherri vs. Hulk Hogan with Jimmy Hart. WCW Halloween Havoc, 23rd October 1994

Disc 3


Segue 5: The Hostile Takeover

Match 13: Six Man Tag Team Match: The Outsiders & Hulk Hogan vs. Lex Luger, Sting & Randy Savage. WCW Bash at the Beach. 7th July 1996

Match 14: No Disqualification Match: Diamond Dallas Page with Kimberly vs. Randy Savage with Miss Elizabeth. WCW Spring Stampede. 6th April, 1997. 

Match 15: Mask vs. WCW Cruiserweight Championship Match: Rey Mysterio, Jr vs. Eddy Guerrero (C). WCW Halloween Havoc, 26th October 1997

Match 16: Singles Match: Bret Hart vs. Randy Savage with Miss Elizabeth. WCW Slamboree, 17th May 1998

Match 17: WCW World Cruiserweight Championship Match: Juventud Guerrera vs. "Lionheart" Chris Jericho (C). WCW Road Wild, 8th August 1998.

Match 18: WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match: Diamond Dallas Page vs. Goldberg (C) 

Segue 6: Oppurtunity Knocks

Match 19: WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match: Booker T vs. Jeff Jarrett. WCW Bash at the Beach, 9th July 2000

Segue 7: A Legendary Era