I'm pissed. Why would Paramount release unclean material? They cleaned Happy Days up... WHY NOT MacGyver? In fact, the prints on TVLand and SpikeTV look a whole lot better than what you guys are making it sound like.
When I said, "We're screwed," I was referring to the episodes on the DVD set being uncut. I still think we're screwed. Why would they divide up a tv movie that served as the pilot of Dynasty? We're screwed.
Can you explain it a little better to me? So it's like switching between two audio tracks? Do you have to lower the bitrate to include the colorized version. This is really confusing. Does it take up more disc space?
In this digital world I'm sure we can make colorizing b&w shows work.... cgi the episode or season. Like I said. Colorize every other frame. I'd actually like to experience that.
Actually, I'm only 20. Going on 21 coming up this September. I'M GETTING TOO OLD. I only watch old classic shows of the 50s, 60s, 70s, a few from the 80s, nothing of the 90s. Okay, so you guys don't want these altered. Well, what about discoloring colored episodes? Turning them to B&W?
I've been noticing this common complaint about not wanting a certain season of a show colorized when sequential seasons ahead have been filmed in color. My question is, what's the different in colorizing a black & white product and having a product been filmed in color. Like for...
Actually, that's not a bad idea. Alexis Carrington is to Dynasty what J.R. Ewing was to Dallas. Actually Joan Collins was never in the first season. If I'm not mistaken, I think it was a supermodel stand-in.
It's like Big Brother but with celebrities. The first season had MC Hammer, Vince Neil, Corey Feldman, and the guy from Webster on the show. The second season heralded the talents of Vanilla Ice, Tammy Fay Messner, Traci Bingham, Trishelle Canatella, and Ron Jeremy.
Sure.... you'll buy it whenever it's released. Because you like the show. And Warner Brothers knows this. So, my theory is that production companies, like Warner Bros, who distribute television shows through the DVD format control the consumers.... yes, they do.