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In November 1992, Buena Vista Home Video entered into a worldwide joint venture with Jim Henson Productions to form Jim Henson Video, which distributed Henson-owned material, including various Muppet productions; the company had previously distributed Muppet content in the United States from 1983 to 1985 under the Muppet Home Video label. [16]
On March 8, 1985, Disney released "Love Leads the Way" which became their first title that went straight to Home Video. [13] The Walt Disney Home Video division was legally incorporated as Buena Vista Home Video on February 13, 1987. [14] The Walt Disney Home Video brand continued to be used for all Disney branded releases afterwards.
DIC Video (1987–1994, distributed by GoodTimes Home Video and Simon Marketing from 1989 to 1992, Buena Vista Home Video from 1993 to 1994 and Golden Book Video from 1987 to 1989) DIC Toon-Time Video (1992–2001, distributed by BMG Video before 1993 and Buena Vista Home Video after 1993) WGBH Boston Video (1980–present)
DVDs are only one of a number of ways of viewing home video. Home video is recorded media sold or rented for home viewing. [1] The term originates from the VHS and Betamax era, when the predominant medium was videotapes, but has carried over to optical disc formats such as DVD and Blu-ray. In a different usage, "home video" refers to amateur ...
In June 1996, DIC appointed Buena Vista Home Video as the home video distributor for the series. [3] Buena Vista, through subsidiary Disney Educational Productions, released various VHS tapes of the series with two episodes on each, which were sold as educational products for places like schools. The company would re-release the series on DVD ...
The following is a list of films that were released straight to home video and thus did not have a theatrical release. They were either produced by Walt Disney Pictures, Disney Television Animation, and/or Disneytoon Studios, and the majority are sequels or spin-offs of Walt Disney Animation Studios films (not being part of the Disney Animated Canon [2]).
The episodes were put on direct-to-video tapes released by the Disney-owned Buena Vista Home Video in the U.S. All of the first three seasons' episodes are available on VHS and DVD, individually or in box sets. There is also a 60-minute VHS featuring all of the five-minute episodes from season 1.
The series' opening theme was adapted from the ... Buena Vista Home Video released two ... and was released on VHS and DVD shortly afterward by MGM Home ...