1. LSFNY: They played my favorite album in its entirety. It has an almost amateurish quality (not as slick as some of their later DVDs) to it that I liked, especially with the videos and effects. The performance and the crowd was top notch. Theresa Thompson was great. The full-band The Silent Man kicked ass, especially LaBrie's high singing at the end. It only sagged a little with Acid Rain and Jordan's keyboard solo, both of which seemed completely out of place.
2. Score: DT was arguably in their prime here. The setlist was a nice survey of their career up to that point, although I didn't need Raise the Knife or Another Won. The orchestra added greatly to the experience, especially with Six Degrees. And the career-spanning documentary included in the bonus section was a welcome addition.
3. LAB: Probably the heaviest of their DVDs, because of the TOT-centric setlist. The band just played like beasts on this one.
4. Live in Tokyo: I was probably most excited for this one because my friends and I had just become fans of the band and were playing I&W nonstop. None of us had WD&DU yet, so the non-I&W songs were brand new to us. We actually thought the individuals in the band were cool (except for maybe the overbearing Portnoy) in the offstage footage, which if you remember, the grunge frontmen of the time were total douches. I actually bought this on VHS and upgraded to DVD years later with the two-pack.
5. LALP: The only thing holding this back is the ADTOE-centric playlist. I know I'm in the minority, but it's one of my least favorite DT albums. The performance was great, LaBrie was the best maybe he's ever been on a live recording. I was thrilled that James sang (on Metropolis) "without sorrow" the same as he did on I&W, which he never did any of the times I saw them live or on any of their other live recordings.
6. CIM: The biggest problem with this release was that James screamed his way through the whole concert, which was a shame because it would have ranked higher thanks to the good setlist. I was also not a fan of the never-ending Surrounded on this one.
7. 5 Years: I really only liked the band commentary on this one (and the fact that it came with Live in Tokyo). This was the darkest period in the band's history, even from an outsider's point of view. The FIF songs sucked, for the most part, though not as much as the songs that didn't make the album but were still played on the fanclub shows (Rotterdam and Paris). Portnoy even said that the record company made him cut a ton out, and we were left with snippets of better things (the performances with the other musicians, Nightmare Cinema, etc.) than were actually left in their entirety.
I can't rate BT4W because I don't have the visual component yet, only the iTunes tracks, which I think are excellent. I did see the truncated hour version on Palladia, but it's not enough to fairly rank the whole thing among the others. I'm guessing it would fall somewhere between Score and CIM.