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#124 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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#126 | |
Banned
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Fact is, nobody is gonna dissect the negatives to clean it up. It's useless. And that's because the TECHNIQUE used to film the movie was faulty to begin with. It's about the WAY the movie was filmed. I'm sure they cleaned up and remastered the thing anyway, but that is not gonna rid of all countless imperfections inherent to the way it was filmed. It was a low budgted movie, guys, not Terminator 2. |
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#127 |
Senior Member
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I'm personally very happy they left the scratches, dirt & "flaws" as-is in the transfer. I was afraid that due to having 3 different cuts on one disc, they'd dnr the hell out of it to remove any possible compression noise. Which is what happened with Lone Wolf & Cub (6 films. 2 BDs. Lots of DNR) But they left AOD alone. There was only a handful of darker scenes where I felt compression noise became a distraction.
As others have pointed out, the TC is really awful looking. Yellow tint to virtually every scene, and EE gives it an awkward digital appearance. But I bought this for the DC. And while the amount of clarity, sharpness & detail changes from scene to scene (Sometimes drastically) it was always film-like IMO. |
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#128 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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And the grading for the International/Director's Cuts of the film is great. The colors are identical to the R3 DVD, but with better contrast levels. Very well suited to the look of the film, and the overall aesthetic of the series. The warmer tone just doesn't work. The US Cut's transfer is definitely in the same ballpark as the US and UK releases. They're all derived from the same master. The UK release had warmer grading than the US, and that's what I'm seeing on the French disc...though perhaps even more oversaturated. In short, I'm thankful that the US Cut is my least favorite version of the film. It's nice to have it on the same disc strictly for comparison purposes, but I'd never default to it. Last edited by Oblivion138; 04-13-2013 at 01:13 AM. |
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#129 |
Banned
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The International cut should appear more and more DIRT free than the DC just because it comes from original film elements easier to remaster, right?
Said that, I think the DIRT is ONLY inherent to those shots were they superimpressed the Skeletons or other elements in the picture. That's obvious. Low budget + old FX technique pre CGI... Any confirmation? |
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#131 | ||||||||
Blu-ray Samurai
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Whatever the case, I'm just happy that the DC version (which is the only "true" version of this film for me) got the proper treatment, and that it looks and sounds just as it should ![]() Quote:
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#132 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Agreed. It could look better, but let's be honest...it's a cost-to-profit ratio question, and no one is going to go all out on a new HD scan and frame-by-frame clean up. The Director's Cut presentation on this BD is exactly what I was hoping for ever since the dawn of BD (and especially since the excellent Anchor Bay release of ED1, and the Lionsgate 25th Anniversary Edition of ED2), and I'd kind of begun to worry that we might never see it. Glad to see that my waiting paid off, and yes, it's pretty much exactly the presentation I'd hoped for.
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#133 | ||||
Banned
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I just read an French Amazon review of the Street Fighter II BD, and the guy was saying "The BD makes the movie looks much older than it is, because it increases the sense of basic animation and drawing". There's a lot of this in my feelings towards Army of Darkness' BD. I'm not saying I can't handle movies like this (and, in fact, liked more Army of Darkness for his stop-motion skeletons than for its mini-Campbells in rear projection), I have, more often than not, but sometimes, it really looks cheap. Quote:
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A simple thing like this would change my view on the PQ. For me, even if the visual rendering is what it is, I can totally understand it. Rear projection, small budget, etc etc. But a copy so dirty is just, IMHO, the sign of not even bothering cleaning the copy a bit. It's almost disrespectful. |
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#134 | |
Banned
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Just remember, the clean up happens after the HD scan, not during. |
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#135 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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![]() This presentation on this French Blu is a beautiful depiction of what this film looked like in its original theatrical form, and I wouldn't have them change one thing about the way it looks or sounds. I wouldn't count on it. Last edited by kdo; 04-13-2013 at 10:47 PM. |
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#137 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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![]() ![]() I'm sure they could be cleaned up to an extent, but they would still have a rougher, grittier look regardless. The Blu-ray looks great, and is about as good as I'd ever expect this film to look. To this day, I'm still amazed with the results of this production, given the budget they had to work with. Raimi did an incredible job overseeing this one, and in my opinion it will always be his "legacy" picture so to speak. You can tell simply by looking at what's onscreen, that everyone involved in the making of this movie worked their butt off. "Army of Darkness" is one of the most beautifully shot (and under-appreciated) movies in history IMO. And as I've said before, I'm still dumbfounded that Universal opted to butcher the film for its theatrical release... |
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#138 |
Banned
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I'm not too sure it is overlooked or underrated. Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, one of the most visionary and poetic movies of the eighties, is almost universally hated by almost anyone.
![]() ARMY, despite being a HUGE departure from its (serious) sequels (call me crazy, but I find "Evil Dead 2" as being rather serious), is almost universally loved by all movie buffs, cult movie lovers and even general viewers out there. I agree, this is Raimi's testament and definitive "legacy", it's a very vital and magic movie dealing with excellent cinematic feelings and dynamics. ... and despite having a very low budget for these type of movies, it managed to do visual miracles. Actually, I'm just glad they did a HD scan of the movie (surely 2K) and thus preserved it from time decay. Within the next decades they'll do a proper remastering and cleaning up based on the actual HD master. This is digital post-production, first you must get a HD master. ![]() Said that, I dream Anchor Bay importing the MGM HD master in America. That's the real movie to me. |
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#139 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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The FX shots are what they are. This was not a big budget film. Do the FX sometimes look cheap? Yes. But that's because Raimi was determined to do as much with his budget as he felt possible. It wasn't a lot of money for Hollywood, but it was certainly a lot for an Evil Dead movie, and he tried to take full advantage. Probably, he tried to do more than he could effectively do, and ended up with some shots that don't look as good as they should. But that's only because he tried to do as much as he could in the film, which is what gives it its energy. Quote:
![]() That's not a blurry photo taken off my TV screen, either...that's an actual screenshot. Versus a screenshot of the Region 3 DVD that I eventually got, captured via the same process: ![]() As you can no doubt imagine, after years of living with the "Bootleg Edition," I was thrilled when I got my hands on the R3 DVD. And the BD is a nice upgrade over the R3 DVD, so I'm happy once again. Newcomers may not think this looks very good, but to those of us who've had to live with much, MUCH worse, the BD presentation of the Director's Cut is a thing of beauty. The best that could be done for the FX shots would be to spot-clean them, as was done with the FX shots for the remaster of The Terminator. It does make those shots more seamless, but yes, they still look a bit rougher than the bulk of the film. So pretty much, we could expect them to digitally clean the printed-in dirt, maybe recalibrate the contrast of background layers to more closely match the foreground action, but that's about it. Last edited by Oblivion138; 04-14-2013 at 12:12 AM. |
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#140 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I would love to see a Shout! release of The Thing or Tremors. |
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