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#321 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | chip75 (05-22-2020) |
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#322 | |
Expert Member
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With 4K TVs coming down to the sub £500 I can’t imagine it’s too long before 4K is the only type of tv you can buy and maybe then those SD diehards will at least be able to tell the difference. SD on 4K looks ![]() |
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#323 |
Blu-ray Prince
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Re studios going for external funding for restoration efforts - the link below is a pretty heart-breaking and damning indictment of MGM and efforts to restore the longer cut of The Alamo.
https://thedigitalbits.com/columns/m...ts/052814_1330 MGM would literally rather let the elements die than allow someone else to try and restore them. Sadly, this is likely to be the popular studio stance, they won't let "outsiders" try for fear of embarrassing them if they succeed. |
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#325 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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It probably depends upon the studio, age and popularity of the film.
IIRC many recent WAC BD releases use new 2K and 4K where the restoration has been funded by the likes of UCLA! MPAA, Lucas foundation and Scorsese foundation. It may be in those cases Warner no longer hold the film elements they are in other archives, but Warner are commercially releasing in disc, however there wouldn’t be a BD without someone else paying for the restoration. Is very different to Star Trek where CBS Paramount could afford to fund it’s just they have decided not to do so as they can make a higher return on the money they have by spending it on other stuff mainly making new content which is more profitable. Star Trek makes them money as they have the existing masters they can continually recycle so any money on top is “gravy”. Also sales of the merchandise, dolls and ship models etc. isn’t dependant upon whether the shows are in SD or HD. |
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#327 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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You can imagine how quickly one studio head would pat another on the shoulder at the fanciest LA restaurant, "Good luck with the Deep Space Nine Kickstarter ... I pledged $100 bucks ..." for the whole thing to de-materialise.
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (05-24-2020) |
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#328 | |||||
Power Member
Nov 2018
UK
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Same issue with Seasons 1-4 of Voyager. Numerous CG effects but when you get to Season 5 it's pretty much a new shot of CG Voyager every episode along with other effects. They really increased the effects work from Season 5 onwards which is why the effects look so bad. They couldn't maintain the quality of previous seasons as there was more to do. Quote:
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#329 | ||
Power Member
Nov 2018
UK
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The constant "boo CBS will never remaster DS9 and Voyager" is the kind of thinking that would keep us in the VHS era of viewing stuff. |
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#330 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I've not said there's no "potential" for it, you're missing the point. The point is that CBS will never ever crowdfund a restoration for part of one of their biggest franchises, no studio would. The fact that the showrunner of DS9 felt compelled to actually crowdfund the documentary in the first place proves that Paramount don't much care, otherwise they'd have paid for the documentary themselves, no? Instead they threw a few scraps to ISB when he came knocking at the door.
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#331 | |
Power Member
Nov 2018
UK
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Thanks given by: | Lope de Aguirre (05-25-2020) |
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#332 | |
Expert Member
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But just to touch on the crowd funding thing, in a manor of speaking don’t studios already do this they go to rich investors to get money to pour into new productions? Asking fans to fund a money seems like the next logical step, especially if you don’t have to deal with someone who is getting nervous about the 100m they just invested in a film that is having production trouble. |
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Thanks given by: | pferreira (05-26-2020) |
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#333 | |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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They've been trying to get people to invest in a new Star Trek movie, but they're not having it (I think China bailed as well), they can't sign-up the leads and the last feature bombed (and the merchandise for nuTrek is a disaster). Yes, we could probably fund a restoration for Deep Space Nine quite easily, I don't think that would be a problem, but then we'd have to fund a BD release on top of that. The only way I see these getting done is someone thinking it's the right thing to do and they know they'd lose money, but that doesn't mean we'd see BDs at the end of it. That would be another department. |
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (05-25-2020) |
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#334 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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As chip said, DS9 and VOY need an exec brave enough to drop $40M on remastering them who's not afraid of there not being a return on that investment for quite some time. But if there's one thing studio execs don't usually have it's foresight. This is also nothing new. |
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#335 | |
Power Member
Nov 2018
UK
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#336 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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The reason Paramount use external investors, mostly in China is because they are skint and don't have the money of Disney or Warner. I think the external investors have seen that Star Trek isn't the money spinning franchise is once was. Especially when comparing budgets and actor costs vs what they can make at the box office and from later home viewing and TV.
You don't see anyone rushing to bankroll new Star Trek films whilst for the Star Trek TV shows CBS are now having to fund more of the cost as Netflix cut back their investment after poor audiences. Whether you call it pre-sales or crowdfunding, the only way this could happen today in the current environment is for CBS to get the money upfront and then make you wait a year or longer for the restoration. However, CBS don't have a direct sales arm where they could charge you something like £300 for the boxset upfront with money non refundable so the had the money in the bank to cover the costs. Viability would then depend upon how many they sold. So really crowdfunding but not called that as would be upfront sales on their own website. |
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#337 |
Power Member
Nov 2018
UK
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#338 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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We have been through the debate of CBS look like losers if they have to crowdfund rather than pay for the restoration themselves.
My comment was more of a joke saying you can use a model like crowdfunding where you pay the money upfront for the BDs, it’s not refundable and you have to wait some time, can be many years to get the product. So rather than calling it crowdfunded on one of the platforms like Kickstarter or Indiegogo, CBS can set up a ST DS9 website, sell copies for the complete boxset at somewhere priced at $300+ with a delivery date in 2 years, but say you only have 3 months to order. Then assuming they sell enough to cover the restoration costs, fine go ahead, if not cancel and refund. Same business model as crowdfunding just not called that as it’s a pre-order from CBS. |
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#339 |
Power Member
Nov 2018
UK
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