Wrong use of words as I should of said remastered for Blu-ray. Also Warner lost the rights to this film at the end of June and the film now belongs to CBS/Paramount or in other words Viacom.Originally Posted by Guido Bibra
My Fair Lady doesn't need to be "restored" - it IS restored! All that needs to be done is a new high-definition transfer of the Harris-Katz-Restoration, since the old one is so old that it wouldn't hold up on HD media. I'm pretty sure that the rights are still in the hands of Warner and a new transfer hasn't been made yet because it's bound to be really expensive - has any studio done a large-format transfer directly from 65mm for a HD target medium yet?
Originally Posted by ahollis
Wrong use of words as I should of said remastered for Blu-ray. Also Warner lost the rights to this film at the end of June and the film now belongs to CBS/Paramount or in other words Viacom.
CBS actually put up the money for the original Broadway production in order to get the rights for the cast album (Columbia Records) and the agreement with Warner Brothers for the rights to revert back to CBS seven years (1972) after the film's release. CBS over the years has released the film to the home video format in conjunction with MGM (VHS) and Fox (several VHS & Laser-disc versions). Warners acquired the rights for DVD home release which ended last month. Viacom (CBS/Paramount) retained all television broadcast rights.
Originally Posted by Guido Bibra ">[/url]
Hopefully they're going to use the correct 2.21:1 ratio and not squash the picture to 2.40:1 like they
Yes that case is VERY ugly and what is with the FONT? It is as if Paramount and CBS thought damn, we got the rights back to this thing.. hey can you get someone in marketing to do up a 10 second redo on the re-release poster art.. maybe have em change the font. haha. Really bad.Originally Posted by Greg_M
The cover is pretty Ugly!