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#221 | |
Senior Member
May 2025
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Thanks given by: | everygrainofsand (Yesterday), HeavyHitter (Yesterday), JohnCarpenterFan (09-03-2025), NuXiaolin (Yesterday), sherlockjr (Yesterday) |
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#222 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
Mar 2019
Canada
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Hiding behind 'director approved' (even when the director is dead) does not make a title like the film was when first released. |
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#223 | |
Blu-ray Guru
Jun 2011
Yorkshire
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#224 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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What you're suggesting is that the film was mainly composed for 1.37:1, and sorry, but there is absolutely no convincing evidence supporting this take. If a film was that compromised then there would be obvious issues. Try doing a 2.35:1 center crop of a 1.85:1 film for example, and see how that looks; I imagine you'd have undeniable issues with the opening credits themselves for a lot of films. I briefly looked back at the HTF thread, and maybe you should too. A lot of your arguments were based on terribly flawed references, which others were telling you at the time (and were proven correct). It seemed you were basing your take off the Hammer restoration assuming that the geometry was correct and that the scan and 4:3 framing was consistent which didn't appear to be the case. I liked RAH's analogy about Hammer desiring a boiled egg, yet when it came time to put the egg in, they dropped in an onion. You were endlessly debating how an onion should be handled, acting as if it was an egg. Last edited by JohnCarpenterFan; Yesterday at 05:50 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | HeavyHitter (Yesterday), sherlockjr (Yesterday) |
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#225 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jul 2020
Hammer House
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We're getting THREE different aspect ratios and people are still kvetching. Oy.
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Thanks given by: | aladdin123 (Today), GhastlyGraham (Yesterday), HeavyHitter (Yesterday), russweiss1 (Yesterday), sa5150 (Today), sherlockjr (Yesterday), Sneezeman (Yesterday), ste71 (Yesterday), Zambinee (Yesterday) |
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#226 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Thanks given by: | Hammerlover (Today) |
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#228 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | Hammerlover (Today) |
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#229 |
Expert Member
Jan 2025
Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Thanks given by: | Hammerlover (Today) |
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#230 |
Senior Member
May 2025
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The biggest example of what you are talking about is actually the haters of teal, people who argue that any teal is revisionist, even when it's demonstrably proven that teal tints existed in many classic films. And even when they get proof of that, including for movies they complain as being "modernized with teal", they deny it with arguments like "print must have faded to teal", even though prints actually fade to magenta. And when they are told there's no such a thing as a print fading to teal, they say "that print must have been doctored to look modern!". Such crowd is hiding behind anti-revisionism to defend their own revisionist preferences.
Last edited by aladdin123; Today at 02:15 AM. |
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#231 |
Site Manager
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Magenta and red are opposites to green and cyan (teal) so if a negative fades towards that, it's "positive" image fades towards cyan green. And the opposite is true.
About teal (blue greens) not being "available" in films of yore, studying the P3 color gamut, tho P3 corresponds and encompasses up to the RGB color points of tri-color separation filters, it still doesn't cover the whole gamut of Technicolor and chromogenic film dyes, particularly on the blue green spectrum (needs 2020 for that) so even P3 cant do some of the teal/cyans film could. |
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#232 | |
Senior Member
May 2025
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I've seen an article saying that in film there are dyes, in the green-blue spectrum if I remember correctly, that not even Rec. 2020 can do! |
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#233 |
Site Manager
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I posted a CIE '31 x,y color diagram map in one of the early "HDR" threads, that mapped and included the color points of several Kodak, Fuji, etc. color films, Maybe in one of the "crayons" threads. I think there were a couple of hue points (mainly blue green) that fell outside of the 2020 bluegreen line, but just a couple.
Recently, thanks to Napoléon I stumbled on a diagram of it with the Technicolor dyes' points, which I'd been looking for a long while, overlaid over the P3 triangle, but it is in different CIE coordinates, so I would have to measure the points along the blue green curve that fall outside of P3 and using a color calculator, recalculate them for Cie '31 x,y to compare properly. But the Tech IB blue greens seem will fall inside the 2020. Another issue is that color scientists and photographers often use a white point of D50 (or sometimes Illuminant "C"), so after you calculate the points, you have to use a chromacity eye adaptation calculator to remap those to D65, which is what is used on "video". (And movies kind of use ~D60 in projection). I did that when I compared the RGB color filters used in film tri-color separation from Kodak's Wratten filter specifications book, and when they recalculated, they fell onto the three P3's D65 RGB x,y chromaticities' points. |
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#234 | |
Senior Member
May 2025
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https://www.calameo.com/fiaf/read/00091854063f747f857c4 Last edited by aladdin123; Today at 03:58 AM. |
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#235 | |
Site Manager
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Oh that's the one I was talking about, shows P3 vs Technicolor, I mentioned on the Napoléon 4K and the Rob Zombie Devil's Rejects 4K threads
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Maybe if I search, I'll find the one I posted ~a decade ago, the dawn of HDR. This in a sense is relevant, as the Technicolor Hammer prints I saw as a kid could be drenched in Technicolours like.. blood |
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