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View Poll Results: Which Blu-ray edition of Predator has the better picture quality? | |||
2008 barebones edition |
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874 | 54.15% |
2010 Ultimate Hunter Edition |
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418 | 25.90% |
Neither |
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322 | 19.95% |
Voters: 1614. You may not vote on this poll |
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#1985 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#1986 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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#1990 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I think I love both approaches to movie viewing experience, some movies are better off with grain, and some movies are made with little and no grain as thats the movies stylic approach. They both are legitimate ways of movie watching, but if I was pushed to the edge to make a decision, I would vote in favour of little grain. ![]() |
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#1991 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Fox could have found a nice middle ground for Predator. Some DNR and a higher bitrate to make it look fantastic. Neither of the releases are a bullseye in quality. But I think I prefer the new one myself. Less sandpaper. And considering I'm getting it for free, plus getting movie money for Predators. I can't complain. |
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#1992 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#1993 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#1994 | |
Senior Member
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http://comparescreenshots.slicx.com/comparison/65043 Pores are gone (although with so much grain I have a hard time telling what's a pore and what's a grain) but I still see his lines. In the new version you can see more detail in his eyes, hair and facial hair, ear, shirt, and the light bulb. |
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#1995 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#1996 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#1997 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#1998 |
Junior Member
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both versions of the film look like shit. overly dnr'd transfers suck and overly grainy transfers suck its really as simple as that.
that being said i am not giving fox any money for the new version seeing as i got the old one for 5 bucks and that will suffice quite well until someone gets their head outta their ass at fox. |
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#1999 |
Contributor
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I don't think I've ever been so startled in my life by DNR. This release, along with seeing several repertoire screenings of 35mm prints the last several years, has made me come down strongly in favor of the 2008 release over this travesty. Arnold does indeed look like a CGI character, and the muscles in the arm shot look like globs of ice cream melted together that are somehow managing to remain solid. The skinned bodies look like strawberry fruit roll-ups to me.
The film was shot in a jungle on mid-80s film stock--it would seem that while Fox slapped a compressed transfer from an unrestored print on the 2008 Blu-ray, that they have gone overboard in the opposite direction and made the 2010 BD look somewhere between an HD news broadcast and an SD video PBS after school special from the 1990s--I didn't know Predator was really about standing up to bullies in school... |
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#2000 |
Special Member
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OK, I'm beginning to see a pattern here.
Grain lovers like grain because it preserves the way film (presumeably 35mm) displays the imagery it captures to the screen. Now then, let's update this arguement to the future....if that's possible. Well, first of all, some movies now are being shot with HD digital cameras, (the Crank films come to mind, and even some parts of District 9) and they have this extremely clean and polished look without the post-production processa where they color correct and add in artifcial grain and whatnot. But let's sat that in the future, movies are shot with 4K cameras and they all have that extremely clean look. Well then films that have grain or extensive amount of grain still have that "yeah, grain! I love it!" feel to it to those who do prefer it? Or will films with grain structure look as outdated as early B&W films. Becaue when you get right down to it, grain itself is just a limitation of the medium, (film) that these movies were filmed on. In fact, I've always wondered, even up to 15 years ago, why films have this dreary grainy look yto them while their behind the scenes stuff that waas sfilmed on handheld cameras look pretty clean and grain free. Again, this goes back to the arguement that there is no grain in the real world, so why would you want it or prefer it in your film? |
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