DVD Review: WWE: Greatest Stars of the ’90s: The Rock, Stone Cold Steve Austin, Hollywood Hulk Hogan, Triple H, Not Provided: Movies & TV
DVD Review: WWE: Greatest Stars of the ’90s: The Rock, Stone Cold Steve Austin, Hollywood Hulk Hogan, Triple H, Not Provided: Movies & TV
Product Description
The 1990s may have been the most turbulent decade in the history of sports entertainment. The biggest fight of the era was not in the squared circle, but rather between rival companies WWE and WCW, and survival was at stake. Like any good match, it saw its twists and turns, particularly when WCW brought WWE to its knees, winning the Monday-night ratings battle for more than 80 consecutive weeks. While WWE eventually prevailed, the real winners of the war were fans who got to see birth and rebirth of some of the biggest stars and factions in the history of sports entertainment. The Greatest Stars of the 90s profiles 15 of them. Hosted by SmackDown announcer and former ECW champion Tazz, the 3-disc set is packed with matches, interviews, comedy, and more.
The best of the 90s, almost,
By Tarantino Fan -
If you purchased WWE Greatest Wrestling Stars of the 80s and were disappointed with the profiles and match selections on that disc, WWE redeems themselves with the sequel that focuses on the best of the ’90s.
First, the main thing that surprised me about this set was how strong they put over Sting. Sting is currently the world champion of their competition, the dreadful TNA promotion, yet they gave him his due on this release. When you open the 3-disc set up your eyes are drawn to a giant image of Sting on one of the DVD art panels. WWE talent and announcers really talk positively about Sting also and do nothing to make the champion of their rival look bad, very surprising indeed.
OK, on with the rest. Disc one is a 3 hour documentary that focuses on who the WWE considers to be the biggest wrestling stars of the ’90s, which is without question the greatest decade in the history of the sport. The recently departed Tazz hosts the documentary and introduces each segment that chronicles each wrestler’s career from it’s beginning thru 1999. All the major players are covered: The Rock, Mick Foley, Shawn Michaels, Undertaker, Hulk Hogan, Sting, Ric Flair, Scott Hall, Kevin Nash, Yokozuna, Triple H, Bret Hart, Lex Luger, Owen Hart and Stone Cold Steve Austin.
The WWE saves Austin for last and Vince himself puts Austin over, and rightfully so, as the greatest star ever in the company. Some may think Bret, Shawn or the Rock are the greatest from ’90s, and they’re entitled to their opinion, but it’s hard to argue with record setting PPV buys, ticket sales and merchandise sales that Austin achieved in the ’90s. He’s the best, and it’s nice to see the company acknowledge it.
If I had to guess, I would say about 40% of the interviews in the documentary are from previous releases, but we do get some new comments from a few guys, most notably from CM Punk (see his comments concerning Lex Luger, he nailed him!). Each wrestler is covered nicely with what they accomplished in the ’90s taking center stage.
WWE is famous for taking shots at people in their documentaries, but they really didn’t bury anyone here. There are some subtle shots of note though. The most obvious one to me is how during Mick Foley’s segment, they showed footage from his “This is Your Life” segment with the Rock from Raw, but failed to say how it was the highest rated segment in the history of Raw, an achievement they’ve always acknowledged in the past. That was interesting. Also, they take a few digs at Luger, they’re fair digs though in my opinion, about how he may have been the total package, but never reached his full potential.
My only complaint with the documentary is that they included Owen Hart and left out a talent like Big Van Vader. I’m sorry, but as nice a guy as Owen was, he was not a main eventer or big draw during his career. Was he good and talented in the ring? Absolutely. Should he be called one of the greatest of the ’90s, I don’t think so. I would’ve replaced Owen with Vader. Vader dominated the ’90s as a monster heel champion in WCW that helped WCW during a very dismal time in their history. His matches with Cactus Jack, Sting, Ron Simmons and Ric Flair are classics and it would’ve been nice to see his career highlighted here. That’s my only complaint, otherwise it’s a very entertaining trip down memory lane. They show a lot of clips and parts of promos during each wrestler’s segment that I had forgot about, so there’s some great stuff here.
Now, for the match selection. There are some great matches on this set. First, WWE has finally released Flair vs. Hogan from ‘91 at Madison Square Garden. This feud was going to headline WrestleMania VIII, but Vince scrapped the match after he wasn’t impressed with the in-ring work, or the box office results (which I think was unfair because those matches took place during the first steroid scandal and a lot of fans were turning away at this point) from their series of bouts. I have to disagree, this match between Flair and Hogan is great! I never thought Hogan and Flair had good matches in WCW, but they have a pretty good bout here in WWF. It’s well worth a look.
Vader is well represented in the match department with a forgotten classic against Sting at Slamboree ‘94 for the International World Title. For me, this match was worth the price of the set alone.
Other matches of note include: Diesel vs. Razor Ramon for the Intercontinental Title from WWF Superstars (you always knew there was going to be a title change when the belt was defended on Superstars!), Diesel and Shawn vs Yokozuna and Bulldog with all titles on the line from In Your House ‘95 (great tag match), Bret Hart vs Shawn Michaels from Survivor Series ‘92, Austin vs Undertaker from SummerSlam ‘98, Sting vs Bret Hart from Halloween Havoc ‘98 and Triple H vs The Rock in a strap match from Fully Loaded ‘98.
WWE continues to release one great compilation set after another, and this one’s no exception. Well worth a look.
Future sets I would love to see them make: The history of the World Title (and please go all the way back to when it was the NWA title), history of the ECW world title, a rise and fall of WCW set, a greatest gimmick matches set and 3-disc sets for the following wrestlers - Jerry Lawler, Big Show, Terry Funk, Chris Jericho and Ricky Steamboat.
Official Match Listing,
By Lloyd Van Buren “Life-long wrestling fan” -
Disc 1
Tazz - Introduction
Shawn Michaels
From the Smallest Champion to the Largest
Yokozuna
Samoan Culture
The Rock
Drawing the Casual Fan
Women of the 90s
Tough and Sexy
Kevin Nash
Battle for Superstardom
Owen Hart
Fun Filled Memories
Ric Flair
Infamous Figure
Mick Foley
The Quest for Success
Not So Great Stars of the 90s
The Reinvention
Hulk Hogan
Attitude and Controversy
Triple H
Technical Savvy
Bret Hart
Pop Culture Phenomenon
Vince McMahon / Eric Bischoff / Paul Heyman
The Total Package
Lex Luger
The IT Factor
Sting
The Bad Guy
Razor Ramon
Respect
The Undertaker
A Rebel
Stone Cold Steve Austin
Tazz - Close
Extras
* Razor Ramon - Restaurant Vignette
July 11, 1992
* The Undertaker Builds a Coffin for Yokozuna
December 1993
* Bret Hart - New Generation Vignette
July 1994
* Owen Hart Inside a Steel Cage
August 20, 1994
* Shawn Michaels Press Conference Before WrestleMania XI
February 28, 1995
* Hunter Hearst Helmsley - “Riff Raff”
April 15, 1995
* Mankind - “And God Created Mankind”
January 6, 1996
* Scott Hall & Kevin Nash N.W.O. Vignette
August 19, 1996
* The Hart Foundation Reunites
March 31, 1997
* D-Generation X Reenacts the Montreal Incident
November 24, 1997
* The Rock Reads Steve Austin’s Eulogy
April 19, 1999
* Steve Austin remembers the Shockmaster
Disc 2
Ric Flair vs. Hulk Hogan
Madison Square Garden - November 30, 1991
WWE Championship Match
Bret Hart vs. Shawn Michaels
Survivor Series - November 25, 1992
WWE Championship Match
Hulk Hogan vs. Yokozuna
King of the Ring - June 13, 1993
Bret Hart vs. Owen Hart
WrestleMania X - March 20, 1994
Intercontinental Championship Match
Diesel vs. Razor Ramon
Superstars - April 13, 1994
International World Heavyweight Championship Match
Sting vs. Vader
Slamboree - May 22, 1994
WWE Championship Match
Bret Hart vs. Diesel
Royal Rumble - January 22, 1995
WWE Women’s Championship Match
Alundra Blayze vs. Bull Nakano
Monday Night Raw - April 3, 1995
Disc 3
Triple Header Match
Shawn Michaels & Diesel vs. Yokozuna & British Bulldog
In Your House - September 24, 1995
#1 Contender Match
Owen Hart vs. Shawn Michaels
In Your House - February 18, 1996
WWE Championship Match
Shawn Michaels vs. Vader
SummerSlam - August 18, 1996
Steel Cage Match
Mankind vs. Hunter Hearst Helmsley
SummerSlam - August 3, 1997
WCW Championship Match
Lex Luger vs. Hulk Hogan
Monday Nitro - August 4, 1997
WWE Championship Match
Stone Cold Steve Austin vs. The Undertaker
SummerSlam - August 30, 1998
United States Championship Match
Sting vs. Bret Hart
Halloween Havoc - October 25, 1998
Strap Match
Triple H vs. The Rock
Fully Loaded - July 25, 1999
Reliving my Teenage Attitude.,
By Jokiemcjokester “Jokester” (Eastern Washington) -
This DVD covers many greats and alot of my favorites (Owen Hart, Kevin Nash, Scott Hall, Steve Austin). In the late 90’s being a nine I remember watching Raw my first time it was a match with Owen Hart after that I was hooked.
Being lucky to catch Nitro at 5pm on Mondays then Raw at 8 do to time zone differences of TNT I didn’t have to choose in the Monday Night wars and was able to enjoy alot of the wrestlers covered in this DVD.
WWE did a good job picking great matches to cover the superstars that are covered on the first disc. The bonus features of the first disc covers the superstar is prices promos. One of my favorites is the Razor Ramon promos. Always a good laugh Chico.
I recommend this DVD to my friends and anyone who grew up watching wrestling in the 90’s. WWE can definitely capitalize on this by making a best of the Attitude era, or maybe a double disc additional matches.
Search WWE: Greatest Stars of the ’90s: The Rock, Stone Cold Steve Austin, Hollywood Hulk Hogan, Triple H, Not Provided: Movies & TV from AmAzon
[asa]B001PPLJOU[/asa]





