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View Poll Results: After Reading This Megathread, Will you still purchase LOTR? | |||
Yes |
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386 | 59.75% |
No |
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260 | 40.25% |
Voters: 646. You may not vote on this poll |
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#5801 |
Senior Member
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They did not do a new 2-4k remaster of all three films for the Blu-ray. They took the original HD masters they have had for years and tweaked it. Just like Gladiator.
Last edited by emgesp; 03-27-2010 at 09:23 PM. |
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#5802 | |
Blu-ray Jedi
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![]() How do you know? Were you there when they did it? |
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#5803 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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But then you still have the ones that will complain about the blu-rays being the Special Editions instead of the originals ![]() Then you have to add in the people who inevitably complain about EVERYTHING ![]() |
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#5804 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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#5808 |
Blu-ray Duke
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#5809 | |
Senior Member
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The Blu-ray comes from the same master that was used for the HDTV broadcast, but with added DNR, color boost and a different encode. Last edited by emgesp; 03-27-2010 at 09:27 PM. |
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#5810 | ||
Blu-ray Archduke
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#5811 |
Blu-ray Reviewer
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Just wanted to briefly chime in. 'FotR' is, and has always been, a softer film. A fact I hope I effectively alluded to when I mentioned Jackson's shooting techniques in my video analysis. However, I feel confident that I was able to separate Jackson's intentions from technical issues with the release. It's a fine line, but DNR-smeared textures look quite different than soft textures. Moreover, while the DNR is getting a lot of attention in this forum, it's only a small part of the reason I gave the transfer a lower score. Watch the bright skies when the Fellowship first hits the snowy mountains - you'll see flickering, wavering, a dash of compression artifacts, and what not. Watch the Council of Elrond. Note the wide shots of the assembly (a bit of color bleeding and EE around Elrond, fluctuating textures in the leaves of the trees, smeary details) and the closeups of the newly formed fellowship (again, not soft, just... digitized and unsightly - some posters actually thought I had posted an upscaled shot from the DVD). Hop back to the opening Shire scenes. Notice the slight jitteriness in the image? The way the titles shift? The wavering, flickering, and inconsistencies that beset Frodo's face, sometimes in the same static shot?
Again though, that doesn't mean all is lost. Entire sequences look great, just naturally soft like many have mentioned. The Mines, the landing and third-act battle, the visit to Lothlorien -- these scenes look pretty good. They still have a few problems here and there (again technical, not source-based), but it isn't as bad as some of the film's more iconic moments. If DNR were the only factor, I would have probably given the transfer a 3.5. But there are so many other issues, that it pulls it down. Is any one issue debilitating? Not in my opinion. But as they begin to stack on top of one another, relatively minor as each one may arguably be, they take a collective toll. More importantly, at the end of the day, I could just be wrong. There is no right or wrong answer like so many seem to think. This isn't an exact science, and not everyone will share the same impressions of a subjective experience. Anyway, the reason opinions of the discs are varying so widely is because everyone's impressions are so dependent upon their home theater setup and their sensitivity to certain issues. Someone with a 40" TV, especially one teeming with optional bells and whistles like sharpening and contrast-boosting features, will wonder what the heck I'm complaining about. Likewise, someone who doesn't mind mild-to-moderate DNR, or doesn't notice the occasional instability of the image, or who simply doesn't pick up on some of the more minor issues will be quite pleased with the results. I was disappointed, but even if I didn't have a screener, I would buy a copy in a heartbeat. It's much better than the DVDs. Instead of arguing about who's right and who's wrong, those who are sensitive to DNR should be educating readers about what they lose when DNR is applied or what a picture suffers when an issue is present. Screenshot comparisons and a friendly explanation go a long way. I still remember when I first moved from the Full Screen camp to the Wide Screen camp in high school. It was all because a friendly Suncoast employee showed me a screenshot comparison when I was buying the Star Wars Trilogy. The paper clearly showed what I was losing on the right and left sides of the image, and I never looked back. Instead of fuming, let's educate each other on why certain things spoil our viewing experience. A studio like Warner, or any studio for that matter, does not want to put out a lousy product. Like any good business, they want to give the market what it demands. If the market demands less grain, artificially sharpened pictures, etc... that's what it will get. The more people who understand what's wrong with a transfer like the one afforded to 'FotR,' the more that viewpoint will become the prevailing viewpoint. It's simple economics, simple supply and demand. If you continue to calmly convert the masses rather than bickering about it all, you'll see positive change, just like we did when Full Screen releases ruled the land ![]() Last edited by Ken Brown; 03-27-2010 at 09:35 PM. |
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#5813 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Vetted by pyjama?...
Anyway, the difference is probably they INSISTED on shooting Everest in IMAX. I mean, the one time they're going such a big and probably dangerous trip... And Jackson just stuck with a more regular film for his films. :P Don't think there would be some Uruk-Hai-warriors or something threatening him to make it stellar. |
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#5814 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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![]() Thanks for continually stopping in to clarify things and give some perspective to the conversation at hand Ken. |
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#5816 |
Senior Member
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Just because something is remastered doesn't always mean they rescan the camera negatives and do a totally new master from that.
There has not been a new telecine process for any of the Lord of the Rings movies for this release. Now, they might have a better HD master waiting for the eventual EE Blu-ray release, but who knows. |
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#5817 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I said that they didn't simply just throw out an 8 year old master like your original post claimed. |
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#5819 | |
Banned
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Here is a review that says it looks very good: "Overall definition remained very good, however. Jagged edges and moiré effects created no concerns, and I also detected no signs of edge enhancement. Source flaws remained absent and never cropped up in this clean transfer" Taken from the review of FOTR from DVDTOWN |
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#5820 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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On a related note, I'm surprised by just how well Gollum and Treebeard have aged! Gollum still looks fantastic. |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Lord of the rings trilogy | Retail/Shopping | Smadawho | 9 | 03-31-2010 04:17 PM |
Lord of the rings (il signore degli anelli) - 6/04/2010 | Italy | El_Burro | 1 | 02-17-2010 09:33 AM |
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