Incredible shrinking Out Of Print (OOP) series on 3 tapes. All boxes have some normal shelf wear and are in decent shape except 'Woman' has a couple of fine scratches down the left spine and 'Kids' has a piece of scotch tape across the top endcap. 

All are full screen and played great except 'Honey, I Shrunk the Kids' had a quick snow flash and a line on opening warning, cartoon & feature played great and then at the end a steady, real quick line on the closing  credits.

INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN (1957, B&W): A special-effects classic, brilliantly designed by Universal Pictures Clifford Stine and featuring a 15-foot mousetrap, an 18-foot pencil, a four-foot needle and a 40-pound pair of scissors.

While vacationing in a small cabin cruiser on what appears to be the Bermuda Triangle, Grant Williams has his wife fetch him a beer from below deck. In those moments a small fog bank suddenly out of nowhere envelops the boat which then passes on thru it. His wife returns and notes that he is covered in a glitter, which easily wipes away with a beach towell.

Six months later, Williams appears to be shrinking at the rate of an inch a week. We then follow him downsizing until a house cat, a spider, water drops, etc. become staggering nemesses and the film crosses over into the horror territory. This film transcends the limitations of the fantasy thriller to deal with the metaphysical aspects as well as a cosmic ending. Much more serious than the other films in this set.

INCREDIBLE SHRINKING WOMAN: Delightful parody combining slapstick and satire. Lily Tomlin portrays a housewife exposed to chemical products that shrink her to miniscule size. In one scene she literally stands on a soap box to deliver a speech to her long-suffering (but tallll) husband; in another she is (again, literally) washed down the drain.

Finally, she is kidnapped by corporation boss Ned Beatty, who wants to learn the secret combo of chemicals so he can shrink anyone who stands in his way. Lily and a gorilla (make-up man Rick Baker) bring the film to a hysterical conclusion.

HONEY, I SHRUNK the KIDS: Rick Moranis plays a nerdy but loveable inventor who can't get his electromagnet shrinking machine to work. When it does, its pointed at a group of youngsters, who are made so small they can't be seen floating in a bowl of Cheerios.

The children have to make their way across the grassy (jungle) backyard to home so fumbling dad can restore them to human size. Their adventures are highlighted by a ride on a bumblebee, a friendly and heroic ant, a killer scorpion and other things too large and small to mention.