Yes, this color presentation of Mary Martin's "Peter Pan" could be better quality...*if* a great master tape existed. It doesn't. So this is the best we can expect.At times the picture has slight waviness (at the top of the screen), seems blurry, etc. But the colors are vibrant, and audio is in great shape.You've seen the outrageous pricing of this DVD? Well here's the reason: It is extraordinarily rare, and likely, there are only a few genuine factory-sealed copies in existence.Why is this?This set was manufactured in 1999. In 1999, DVD players were less than two years old in the US, and those players were very, very expensive. VHS was still the norm; DVDs were for the elites who could afford players.Consequently, GoodTimes didn't produce very many of the DVD sets. They did produce a glut of VHS copies, however.The DVDs that were released by GoodTimes were packaged in CARDBOARD SNAP-CASES (SNAPPER CASES) ONLY. Absolutely NONE were packaged in today's standard plastic clamshell-type DVD cases.Did you read that last part? There isn't a single authentic Peter Pan with Mary Martin GoodTimes DVD that comes in a plastic case. Not one.In addition, all GoodTimes releases had a movie-titled security strip across the top, and the strip was underneath the plastic shrink-wrap.So to spot a genuine, factory-sealed copy, it must be in a cardboard snap-case and it must have a movie-titled security strip across the top, underneath the shrink-wrap. If the security strip is missing, the set is a re-wrapped (used) one. If it's in a plastic case, it's a fake, worth nothing.All copies in standard plastic cases are counterfeits, including those with inserts. Most of them originated on ebay, and many found their way here. Counterfeits are still sold on Amazon. by unscrupulous third-party sellers. They are illegal, they are worthless, and if your seller sells you one, you should alert Amazon and demand a full refund.GoodTimes ceased to exist in 2005. This movie was never again legally released.Only GoodTimes was licensed by NBC to issue this DVD set. Anybody who copies the GoodTimes version, packages it in a plastic case, and sells it as new is engaging in copyright piracy. NBC still owns the copyright to "Peter Pan with Mary Martin", and that copyright can be found on the Federal Government's copyright web site. It's not even legal to ship a counterfeit using the US Postal Service. So if you receive a fake, that's one more agency that might want to know.Be aware that some sellers will find a used copy in a cardboard snap-case, and they have access to a security-strip printer and shrink-wrapping machine. Any "new" DVD in these sets should be absolutely free of any trace of human handling (fingerprints, scratches, rubs). Discs should be pristine. Compare the playing side of the disc to a known, "store bought" (but legitimate) DVD. If the Peter Pan version is bluish/purplish, it's a fake. If the DVD disc-label is paper, it's a fake. No exceptions.I can't stress this enough: Legitimate, authentic new copies are rarer than nearly any other DVD released in the United States. There may be only a handful of them left, and usually, those sets are in the hands of collectors, not sellers.