I've been collecting DVD's for years, so should I complain when a MGM's HD transfer of, "A Bridge to Far," has specks, scratches on most frames, even though the print and audo is great?
7/12/08 at 11:28pm
Death to PG-13! And now death to DVNR too!!
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Originally Posted by Cassy_w
Removing those white specs results in travesties such as THE LONGEST DAY because they just cannot control themselves. They crank it up to the max and remove all the detail as well.
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Death to PG-13! And now death to DVNR too!!
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Originally Posted by Cassy_w
What I am saying is that films with spot removal tend to have everything thrown at them. It seems to be all or nothing.
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Originally Posted by Thivanka R. Perera
Suddenly it's become a vogue to bitch about DNR--but I remember no one complaining when Con Air came out, which was virtually grain-less. In many scenes during that movie Nic Cage's face looked waxy, plastic. But no one complained because a 'pro' came and made a thread about it.
If a print is three generations old, some DNR is necessary--not all grain is sacred. I remember James Cameron saying after watching his film Aliens years later he was surprised by how grainy it was--so no, most of the grain in the picture is not the director's intent. |
Seeing it in a theater was quite enough for me.
Death to PG-13! And now death to DVNR too!!
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Originally Posted by Thivanka R. Perera
I remember James Cameron saying after watching his film Aliens years later he was surprised by how grainy it was--so no, most of the grain in the picture is not the director's intent.
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Originally Posted by Thivanka R. Perera
Suddenly it's become a vogue to bitch about DNR--but I remember no one complaining when Con Air came out, which was virtually grain-less. In many scenes during that movie Nic Cage's face looked waxy, plastic. But no one complained because a 'pro' came and made a thread about it.
If a print is three generations old, some DNR is necessary--not all grain is sacred. I remember James Cameron saying after watching his film Aliens years later he was surprised by how grainy it was--so no, most of the grain in the picture is not the director's intent. |
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Originally Posted by Thivanka R. Perera
I remember James Cameron saying after watching his film Aliens years later he was surprised by how grainy it was--so no, most of the grain in the picture is not the director's intent.
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Originally Posted by Thivanka R. Perera
If a print is three generations old, some DNR is necessary--not all grain is sacred.
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Rewind - DVDcompare/Site Administrator
*US PS3 (1080p) - Xbox 360 Elite (HDMI) - Nintendo Wii (Euro) - Sony PSP-2000 - Nintendo DSi
*HD DVD Toshiba XE1 (1080p) - Sony Bravia KDL-40W2000 (1080p) - Yamaha RX-V1800 (HDMI 1.3)
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Originally Posted by Cassy_w
I never complained about CON-AIR because it's a stupid movie and I have no intention of ever watching it again.
Seeing it in a theater was quite enough for me. |