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#1481 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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![]() Arab women, like many women in the West, were there to care for the children and keep the home fires burning - not to be involved in the affairs of men. Which is why - when Anthony Quinn and his "army" are leaving to raid Aqaba, the women are the ones on the hills cheering/yodeling (I don't know the correct word for the sound the women are making). Those are all women, unless a few children are also involved (I can't check the film right now). It is what it is/was, not what it should be. ![]() |
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#1482 | |
Senior Member
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Here is a short list of my ratings of the theatrical PQ of 70 mm prints (some from 65 mm negs, some not) that we happened to see in the San Francisco Bay Area: Near perfect: Lawrence of Arabia, Ben-Hur, El Cid, Sleeping Beauty. Damn Good, but not quite as good as the above: 2001: A Space Odyssey, Around the World in 80 Days (1956; outstanding sense of depth), Oklahoma! Down a bit, but still better than most 35 mm: West Side Story (a little grainy), It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World Inferior: Outland, Quest for Fire Last edited by garyrc; 02-10-2013 at 11:26 PM. |
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#1483 | |
Senior Member
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Universals E.T. was one of their best efforts ever, and I think they are getting better overall. |
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#1484 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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While they're all technically great, I prefer LOA's transfer to those of Ben-Hur of Bridge on the River Kwai, but it's more to do with aesthetics and cinematography. To quote Lawrence, "It's clean." Those other films have those muddy brownish looks to them. The desert and the clear blue skies are beautiful. LOA might just be the best photographed film ever. Every shot is breathtaking.
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#1485 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#1486 | ||
Blu-ray Ninja
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I thought "It's Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World" was superior looking to LOA's transfer. It's much more consistent, and there are only 1-2 anomalies that I could observe, besides the obvious opticals (effects shots). I need to watch it again though. Great BD, and great film. I saw Ben Hur on BD a while ago, and was quite impressed, but it's not a film close to me, so I may have been more forgiving. Found it too be very good looking, but certainly not perfect. Don't remember specifics though. 2001 has too many problems to list, so it's clearly inferior to LOA IMO. However, most of those issues are more related to the compression used. EIDT: To me Bridge On The River Kwai looks way too processed. Doctor Zhivago and A Passage To India both look great, with a few minor exceptions, of course. Last edited by Bluyoda; 02-11-2013 at 08:56 AM. |
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#1487 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Ben Hur is another one. Yes, it looks amazing for such an old film (again) but this one is not perfect at all. No way. I noticed issues with blacks and it was rather soft too in places I think. I doubt it could look any better though. |
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#1488 |
Blu-ray Ninja
Jun 2011
London
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Well one thing's for sure. Lawrence Of Arabia, Ben-Hur, Jaws look 100% better than most new movies do
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#1489 | |
Expert Member
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And Lawrence of Arabia is a fully different thing. Though I didn't see any EE I did feel that it was not as good looking as it could be, but then again I realise that actually thats the best it can look. LOA had a very painstaking optical restoration back then which actually even then did not 100 percent match the look it originally had. With the 8K Restoration one could go closer but I'm sure it will never be as good looking in terms of Resolution as films with relatively pristine original 70mm negatives like Sound of Music, Patton or Cleopatra. The detail is there but what Lawrence will always lack is the sterile grainless look it must have had originally in it's very first 70mm Prints. And though I have to say that Lawrence looks better to me than say Sound of Music, it's actually as one noted due to LOA's superior Cinematography. In terms of resolution and color depth though it will never look as good as Sound of Music due to source limitations. And what people might see as EE in some scenes is actually some scenes shot with slit focus for more depth of field, the phenomena is also there in Ben-Hur and is part of the original negative. Though I didn't find the effect visible in LOA as in Ben-Hur people might have seen it as Lawrence of Arabia had scenes with slit focus. Last edited by Scholer; 02-11-2013 at 11:36 AM. |
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#1490 | |
Senior Member
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[QUOTE=Scholer;7126991 The detail is there but what Lawrence will always lack is the sterile grainless look it must have had originally in it's very first 70mm Prints..[/QUOTE] That's exactly what it had in the 70 mm print I saw in 1962, during its first run. I believe that Robert A. Harris found that he needed 8K to get all of the detail off of the negative. Of course, there is no way to get that on a Blu-ray ... but maybe someday, when there is a better medium than Blu .... |
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#1491 |
Active Member
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Lineup for Cinemark's Classic Series for the spring is up.. Go to their site to check out films and dates, but Lawrence of Arabia is playing on March 20th at 2pm and 7pm.
Other films include, Forrest Gump, West Side Story, Godfather, American Beauty, and of course same time as last year, Casablanca. |
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#1492 | |
Expert Member
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#1494 | |
Power Member
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![]() Anyway, I understand what youre saying given the cirucumstances in the story of the film. Just to note, I thought LoA looked FANTASTIC! |
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#1495 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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http://www.caps-a-holic.com/hd_vergl...D=1163#auswahl Certainly better than 2001. |
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#1497 |
Power Member
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I've only watched it once so my opinion may not carry as much weight as others but I would say yes. It sounds fantastic, looks fantastic, and the story is epic and it also helps that T.E. Lawrence is, IMO, one of the most interesting characters I've ever seen in a film. He's a hard character to peg and thats makes him very intriguing.
Its also beautifully shot with gorgeous cinematography. |
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#1498 | ||
Blu-ray Ninja
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Well, have you seen any other David Lean films, such as Doctor Zhivago, Bridge on the River Kwai, or my personal favorite, A Passage to India? Do you like old-fashioned epics, with very character-driven story? That's David Lean. LOA is the epic of all epics. The vistas are endless. The spectacle enormous, and all life action, but it's all about the characters. That was David Lean's biggest strength IMO. This is basically a must-own BD if you call yourself a film buff. I won't watch it every week, but once a year probably. A really great film. Even though, I'd recommend APTI more, but that's just my odd taste, I guess. Lol |
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#1499 |
Blu-ray Ninja
Jun 2011
London
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Please don't be confused. I suppose I meant PQ, but it's hard to seperate that from cinematography, so I'd say both. Freddy Young's photography on Lawerence Of Arabia is a thing of wonder, whereas a lot of new films look like they were shot on an old VHS camera. All my best looking Blu's are older movies.
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#1500 |
Senior Member
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Did they finally re-do Patton? I was cautioned that they would be selling the old overprocessed version in a new box. If they created a new transfer, who did it, and how is it?
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