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#5561 | |
Member
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Good to see he was able to write his review from what he learned here. |
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#5562 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I've been thinking...what if TT went to Sony and purchased another 3000 copies but released the theatrical version but with the original color timing? They could call it the "original theatrical edition" or something. Everybody would win. Another sellout for TT, Sony gets it's money and fans displeased with the tinted version get what they want. Sounds like a win-win to me.
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#5563 | ||
Power Member
Oct 2011
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It's certainly possible that the VHS, LD, and DVD transfers for NOTLD 1990 were too bright - I never saw them - or maybe the original film was a bit darker than those video releases - I barely remember it - but the most accurate caps here from pscion and HD Goofnut clearly show that for a considerable stretch of this film it has been subjected to dramatic recoloring. And whenever that kind of radical departure occurs, even if it's a creative correction closer to the filmmaker's original intent, then all we really need for that to be palatable is a context, plus the original unaltered movie as a point of comparison. Simply replacing the original as if it never happened just never sits well with me. In the digital realm, we've seen too much of this obsessive 'when-is-it-ever-really-finished?' tinkering. So I'm genuinely torn here. Even if I enjoy this particular edition, and it's already a surefire collectible, it still bugs me that this will likely be the only version that more passionate fans of NOTLD 1990 ever see in the Blu-ray format. I mean, I know how I felt when I saw Paramount's 2005 remastered DVD of George Pal's War of the Worlds which was dramatically "brightened" and "desaturated" from the look of its original primary red-blue-green 3-strip Technicolor. Although much cleaner and sharper, its colour grading was just plain wrong...to the extent of revealing more wires on the models than were ever visible theatrically, making some wonder "How did this ever win the Oscar for FX in '53?" Easy...the original 'less modern' color grading was consistent with all the painstaking work on set to paint those filaments so that they blended better with the cyclorama. But which version do you think we will get when Paramount eventually gets around to releasing a Blu-ray? Such wonky transfer choices have a way of proliferating and supplanting the original work...thus, over time, making a hash of its history...basically counting on less discriminating audiences to eventually neither know nor care. Quote:
So if you're a passionate fan of this movie, my recommendation would be to hang onto the best transfer you can find with the original coloration. And even hang onto this controversial DP-supervised and Director Approved 'remix', because I have little faith NOTLD 1990 will get done again. Maybe in 3 years for its 25th Anniversary, but just as likely Sony has washed their hands of this title in hard media form. Last edited by ROclockCK; 10-06-2012 at 07:46 PM. |
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#5564 | |
Active Member
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It's their choice for what they want their reputation to be, to me I hope that good movies are sent to other companies instead of TT in the future. |
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#5565 | |
Power Member
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#5566 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#5567 |
Blu-ray Guru
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#5568 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#5569 |
Banned
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Not misleading at all, if you choose not to skew it to create an argument. It doesn't say he supervised the transfer, just that he "signed off" on it. Many directors watch a finished product without actively being involved. By watching it after the fact and giving it his endorsement, that's signing off on the product. So what the review states is true.
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#5570 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#5572 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
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#5573 | |
Power Member
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I haven't seen any 1920X1080 comparisons between the blu ray and the streaming service presentation, but it's possible that it's just an upscale... or that it's a transfer from an older, inferior master. |
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#5574 |
Banned
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No, TT is not the "@sshole", it's the people who're continually accusing TT for an act, for which they are completely innocent of any wrong doing. This HD transfer of NOTLD was issued to TT directly from Sony as is, to be released on blu-ray. Have it ever occurred to you, this is the way Tom Savini wanted the movie to look in the first place, not how it looked theatrically and on DVD, but didn't have the modern technology (that's available today) to do it?
Last edited by slimdude; 10-06-2012 at 08:33 PM. |
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#5576 |
Junior Member
Jan 2011
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The technology to darken the picture and make it blue? Did that not exist in 1990?
Last edited by EmpireSB; 10-06-2012 at 08:48 PM. |
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#5578 | |
Special Member
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Savini has previously stated that he shot the opening in the bright and sunny day to directly contrast the horror to come. He also complained that zombies were typically shot grey/blue looking and that they didn't look like real corpses in zombie films -- he preferred that they look yellow in his film. Both of these things are alterered now. The zombies look grey, and the whole film is bathed in darkness. This isn't a case of "they always wanted it this way!" It's more likely that the DP wanted to use the work as a reference to getting more gigs so he updated the look. I have no proof of this but I'm slightly cynical and it wouldn't surprise me. The film was intentionally shot to look DIFFERENT than all the other zombie films up until that point. With natural lighting/color. Look at all the comments about the new filtering "It looks like a Resident Evil movie! That's how a zombie movie should look!" "Looks more like a typical zombie movie now!" etc. The comments supporting the change. Yes it looks more typical of a zombie film... but that's exactly what they were trying to avoid. It looks 'appropriate' for a zombie horror film in the year 2010 -- but that's not how they envisioned the film in 1990, or how they shot it. They could have easily shot the opening at dusk in 1990, or legitimately shot it day-for-night... as someone mentioned an episode of Tales From the Crypt did it on a 90s TV budget. This is no better than releasing a 'colorized' version of the 1968 film and saying "Romero would have shot it in color but they didn't have the budget then!" Perhaps that's true... but Romero DIDN'T shoot it in color and to alter that would be wrong. (a colorized version has been release for the film, on VHS). Regardless, I agree -- Twilight Time is not to blame here. It's absurd that they would have expected Sony to have done this. It's also absurd they should have known the intended look of the film. Perhaps they could have done some research but that wouldn't have changed anything. All that would have happened was they would have been a little more prepared to explain the alterations to the fans. The changes don't render the film unwatchable but let's be honest -- it's not how Savini and Co. intended for it to look. They may have given it the thumbs up now -- but one wonders if he would have done the very same thing to a non-filtered version he popped into his "blue-ray" player. I'm guessing he would have. Any blame here should be directed at Sony. Had TT not licensed this film, they would have either released it themselves at some point (though it sounds like it was shelved for at least 2 years... so perhaps not) or licensed the exact same master out to a different studio... so the only difference would have been a non-limited run and a lower price point. It sounds like the complaining is that people want TT to provide the original color timing on BD. They can't. Sony will have to make that call in 3 years. I'm guessing they will based on the complaints and the popularity of the title but expecting TT to do anything more than refund the product is absurd. They've handled this situation with a lot of class. Would I have preferred a little more attention to detail? Of course. It sounds like they've learned their lesson going forward though. |
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#5579 | |
Special Member
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Had TT released the original master on BD the complaints would be all about how it looks too soft, there are dirt/speckles all over the print, etc. "This is clearly an old master..." TT isn't responsible for the mastering job Sony did in 2009/2010. This is all they were given and to the best of their knowledge it most represented the intention of the film-makers. Most of the complaints just seem to be from people who don't understand the studio business models, how film/TV production and video releases work and how production deals like this work either. |
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#5580 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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