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NFL: America's Game: 1970 Baltimore Colts
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NFL: America's Game: 1970 Baltimore Colts

Our Price: $19.97 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
SKU:

694515

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Description:

In 2000, led by Pro Bowlers Ray Lewis, Sam Adams and Rod Woodson, Baltimore allowed the fewest points ever in a 16-game season - 165, an average of just over 10 per contest. But it was the Ravens' efforts in Super Bowl® XXXV against the Giants that clinched their inclusion amongst the greatest defenses of all time. Join NFL® Films as they retell the story of the 2000 Ravens.

Features:

America's Game uses exclusive interviews from Lewis, Dilfer, and Brian Billick to reminisce about their championship season and one of the NFL's® greatest defensive units


Format: DVD


Genre: Special Interest, Sport, Sports-Themed Rating: NR


Runtime: 55 mins Original Product Release Date: 07/31/2007 Officially licensed


Product Details:
Actors: Ed Harris, Bubba Smith, Bill Curry, Mike Curtis, Ernie Accorsi
Director: Not Provided
Format: Color, DVD, NTSC, Subtitled
Language: English
Subtitle: English, Spanish
Number of Discs: 1
Studio: Warner Home Video
Run Time: 55 minutes
DVD Release Date: July 31, 2007
Average Customer Rating: based on 4 reviews
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Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 5.0 ( 4 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:

5A Great Game Lost Forever. All We Have Left Is a Bad Highlight Reel.Jan 03, 2010
By D. Dutton "Baltimore Colts Fan"
This film highlights the 1970 Season and features Bill Curry, Bubba Smith, Ernie Accorsi and Mike Curtis sharing there memories.

The NFL Films footage is amazing and well worth the price. Ed Harris does a great job with this video. I can see why he was chosen.

According to many accounts, Super Bowl V was seen as an embarrassment. NFL Films' famed John Facenda dubbed it "The Blunder Bowl". Even some of the former Colts players deemed it an "empty win". Bubba Smith to this day claims he never wore his Super Bowl ring. And to top it all off, the NFL made a ridiculous call awarding the MVP to a player on the losing team. I believe the decision to give the MVP to a loser, forever stamped this game as a disaster. You'll never see that mistake made again. (Sorry Chuck good game but no MVP.)

The emotion that comes out of Bubba Smith, Mike Curtis and Bill Curry is intense. It puzzles me that these guys are not happy about a game they won? OK, they lost to the Jets in Super Bowl III. Colt fans everywhere were crushed as well. I will never get over the Colts having the ball 6 times in the Red Zone and getting no points, in a 16-7 loss. In 1970 however the Colts beat the Jets convincingly twice.

I will take no shot's at Mike Curtis (one of my all-time favorite players) but his lack of respect for Unitas was disappointing at best. Sometimes locker room stuff should stay there. A 2006 poll of living Hall of Famers selected Unitas the NFL's #1 Quarterback of All-Time. Mike Curtis is also an all-time great player who belongs in the Hall of Fame. Why he took shots at Unitas is unclear. Maybe it's the natural LB/QB friction, but Curtis comes off as bitter.

I get the passion, but I don't get the disappontment...they won the Super Bowl! If these players thought it was an "empty" or "bittersweet" victory, think of the thousands of players and numerous Hall of Famers that never wore a Super Bowl ring. How about the Cowboys who lost the game? They all must shudder to hear the Colts complain about their Super Bowl Rings.

As a fan, Super Bowl V was a great win for the home team. Baltimore Colt fans still love to see Jim O'Brien kick that 32 yarder. I was 11 years old and I remember that Sunday afternoon watching with my dad, in our den, on an old Sylvania B&W TV. I remember Unitas throw the tipped ball to Mackey. I can still recall the relief and joy as Mike Curtis made that key interception that set up the winning kick, and then jumping up and down just like O'Brien when the kick went through. I can still hear the cars and trucks on the streets of Baltimore honking their horns. The radio stations played the Colts fight song and Jim Karvellas proclaimed, "The Baltimore Colts are World Champs!" on WFBR.

For the fans of Baltimore, the Orioles were also World Champs beating the Reds in the World Series just 3 months earlier. We were in seventh heaven. We finally answered for the humiliation of the Mets and the Jets.

Until the Ravens won Super Bowl XXXV, Baltimore wasn't really allowed to enjoy it's last Championship. The Colts were gone, the league, NFL Films, some disgruntled players, and most sport writers had negative things to say about Super Bowl V. To make matters worse NBC taped over the only videotaped copy of the entire game broadcast and this game is lost forever and can never be viewed again in it's entirity. All other Superbowls are avaialble to watch again except Superbowl V. (I'm still holding out hope that a home made bootleg copy will surface someday.)

I still have yet to see or read anything about Super Bowl V that captures the elation we all felt in Baltimore to see our Colts crowned World Champs in 1971. This game can never be truly captured by a highlight reel. Yes there were many turnovers and while this makes for a sloppy looking highlight reel, it was an incredibaly intense and exciting game. You dared not step out of the room. No highlight reel can ever capture the feel of this intense game and unfortunately it is lost forever.

All this said...this is a great Colts video and all Baltimore fans should add it to their Colts collection. For a bright-eyed 11 year old kid Super Bowl V will always be a true wonder. However when I heard NFL Films famed John Facenda, call it "the blunder Bowl" I have since felt alone in loving Super Bowl V. After watching this DVD I still do. I still love recalling this game and I say, thanks Jim O'Brien...wherever you are!

3 of 3 found the following review helpful:

5Best Episode of a Great SeriesDec 16, 2010
By Sean Mitchell
The NFL Film's America's Game is wonderful series. This is the best episode. The 1970 Colts were a team haunted by the failure of Super Bowl III. As Bill Curry describes, the 1968 Colts were on the verge of being proclaimed the greatest team in NFL history. The loss in Super Bowl III not only took that away from them, it forever branded them as the first team to lose to the AFL, to be constantly relived in NFL Films highlights and on ESPN classic. The 1970 Colts used that failure as the catalyst for the 1970 season in attempt to redeem themselves. However, it is only after winning Super Bowl V do they realize that even a Super Bowl victory can not make up for that loss. Growing up a Baltimore Colts fan, I have always understood this. As sports writer Bill Gildea put it, "no one in Baltimore ever got over the loss in Super Bowl III." I am 50 years old and I still haven't gotten over Super Bowl III. The shame of it is that the 1970 Colts should be celebrated for its remarkable character and determination. They were not a great team, in fact, it was a team on the decline. The defense was outstanding, but the offense was mediocre. Tom Matte was injured, Jimmy Orr was done, and John Mackey was in decline. Unitas had never really recovered from his 1968 arm injury. However, they found ways to win. That their triumph did not result in the redemption that they players sought only adds to the charm and melancholy nature of the episode of this episode. That's what makes the episode great. This is real life, not some phony sports story.

BTW, it seems to me that a really great book could be written about the 1968 Colts. I wonder why no one has attempted it? A bizzillion books have been written about the Jets, but I would think that a book about that game from the Colts perspective and how they players have dealt with that defeat over the past 40 years would be far more interesting.

4 of 5 found the following review helpful:

5Tale of Two Cities - Baltimore / IndianapolisNov 04, 2008
By Vernon E. Grier
This superbowl V I remember as a youth barely and it was great to re-live this moment on dvd! I always loved Bubba Smith and the Baltimore Colts defense. On this viewing, this Superbowl V was not a very exciting game, filled with turnovers and some sloppy playing on both Baltimore and Dallas but good viewing anyway.

I loved the commentary by Bubba Smith stating that since the organization left in 1983, the Baltimore Colts players have been shuned by the Indianapolis Colts, the present Colts have no history of their team during the Baltimore years or don't respect it, what a shame!!

This dvd is still a great view!

1 of 2 found the following review helpful:

4Would've liked to have seen a bit more material prior to 1968Dec 07, 2009
By Canuck in WA
Being a lifelong Colts fan until that fateful night on 3-28-84, I was hoping that this DVD would bring back a flood of memories for the decade of the 60's that was totally agonizing for any Colts follower. And yes, while this DVD was "good", it could've been way better. NOTHING is touched on prior to Super Bowl 3 (well, a mention of the 34-0 win in the NFL championship game was there), but I felt that considering what they went through in '64 (losing to Cleveland in the championship game 27-0) after being huge favorites, the '65 heartbreaking playoff game to the Packers with Matte as QB, and the one loss season in '67 where the final game vs. the Rams that year left them out of the playoffs nonetheless would've been great background material for the prelude to Super Bowl 3 and what the '70 season meant to the team. As far as the season itself goes, it is a well produced documentary where Mike Curtis, Bill Curry, Bubba Smith and Ernie Acorsi are the primary interviewees reliving the details of that season (a quick game-by-game synopsis on the schedule). And the extras at the end (mainly how the team as a whole feels that since moving to Indy, the Baltimore history of the club is entirely forgotten), are enjoyable and not just "fluff" material. Again, this isnt meant to say that the DVD is not worth the money (to me it was), but much like to the Colts' players in the DVD, I felt that there was something missing that could've made it better.

 
 
 
 
 
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