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I'd go with as the most annoying quirks the obvious 'special' features ("special on THIS edition only, a chapter list and Albanian subtitles!"), forced viewing of warnings or previews, and PC DVD-ROM features (because they aren't made for Macs, although the f***ing DVDs are probably even authored on Macs and Sun systems, as are half of the original films, and Macs still reign in Hollywood and other creative circles).
I also think that every film on DVD should come with, at minimum, the trailer for the film. No matter how many times I watch a movie, I usually like to watch the trailer before the feature -- just kind of a thing I got used to when I started watching DVDs -- and I just don't like it when the trailer's MIA. What really makes me wonder is when a DVD that's loaded with prodigious special features, perhaps even as a two-disk set, is somehow missing the trailer, or has multiple previews for other films but not the one at hand. huh?
I like a lot of the substantial DVD extras. I'm very interested in the processes of film-making and I love watching the films again with commentary or with multiple commentaries. Sometimes even a bad film can be redeemed by watching with commentary tracks (or by viewing documentaries on the making of the film), and in the case of some films -- such as This Is Spinal Tap (with Tap commenting on the film, in character throughout) and Bubba Ho Tep (with Bruce Campbell firmly in character as Elvis and critiquing his own performance and the movie, at times not happy with the way he's portrayed or how little that Campbell character looks like him) -- the commentary tracks can be a whole additional entertainment experience on a par with the film. The commentaries I've heard for John Carpenter and Kurt Russell collaborations, too, with actor and director shooting the breeze (Big Trouble In Little China, one of my all-time favorites, and also The Thing, that I finally saw for the first time a few months ago), are also very good, as are the ones for The Mummy and its sequel.
I also like when films based (almost always loosely) on historical events include archival footage or other kinds of documentary on those events and the people involved. I just now finished watching a two-disc set of The French Connection that has some interesting examples of that, as did The Cinderella Man that I just recently watched. You can learn a lot from that kind of thing, though movies these days very often send me running to the Web to look up further background information, a thing that would have been more difficult before the advent of this communicative medium.
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