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  1. Stephen_J_H

    USHE Press Release: Back To The Future 25th Anniversary Trilogy (Blu-ray)

    No, they wouldn't. Digital compositing didn't start being used until 1993, when Kodak's Cineon software became available. While CG effects predate 1993, those effects still had to be recorded to film and then optically composited.
  2. Stephen_J_H

    USHE Press Release: Back To The Future 25th Anniversary Trilogy (Blu-ray)

    It boils down to film and video (and HD or no, Blu-Ray is still video) being two completely different processes. If an image harvesting is done correctly, including colour timing, grading, contrast balancing (not boosting), the grain should be no more apparent than it was on release prints...
  3. Stephen_J_H

    USHE Press Release: Back To The Future 25th Anniversary Trilogy (Blu-ray)

    OK, having looked at blu-ray.com's screenshots in 1080p, I think this is much ado about nothing. All screenshots there show a healthy amount of grain, and certain matte processes result in haloing that may be misinterpreted as EE. If any grain reduction has been done, it is likely on the process...
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