- Joined
- Feb 8, 1999
- Messages
- 18,428
- Real Name
- Robert Harris
The Guns of Navarone, directed by J. Lee Thompson, and released in summer of 1961, is a well made WWII action thriller.
Shot by Oswald Morris, with a score by Dimitri Tiomkin. Screenplay by Carl Foreman.
There were some 70mm blow-ups, and a number of magnetic 35s.
The negative was processed in the UK, with prints produced in dye transfer by Technicolor. It was later re-cut back in the Colonies.
The OCN, with all it's inherent dupes, was well-loved over the years, with an analogue restoration performed c. 1989-90 by UCLA's Robert Gitt.
Guns is a film that looks at good as it possibly can in 4k, with the addition of HDR, which is okay. It's very much an "it is what it is" film.
Is it a film that deserves a 4k release? That's the question. What has been gained over a new image harvest presented via a new Blu-ray.
Color is generally fine, with dupes looking as precisely what they are. Grain (the film was shot on the new 5250 stock) is inherent, and the imagery imparts the normal deficiencies of non-panavision anamorphic optics of the era.
Still a superb film, that stands up nicely to test of time, as does the original stereo mix, now with Dolby Atmos added, which enlivens the proscenium.
Sony (Columbia) has just updated Navarone with the addition Dolby Vision and a new very attractive Steelbook, the artwork of which feels decidedly Japanese as opposed to German. Updated stats below:
Image – 4 (Dolby Vision)
Audio – 5 (Dolby Atmos)
Pass / Fail – Pass
Plays nicely with projectors - Yes
Makes use of and works well in 4k - 3
Upgrade from Blu-ray - Yes
Worth your attention - 8
Slipcover rating - 6 (Steelbook)
Highly Recommended
RAH
Shot by Oswald Morris, with a score by Dimitri Tiomkin. Screenplay by Carl Foreman.
There were some 70mm blow-ups, and a number of magnetic 35s.
The negative was processed in the UK, with prints produced in dye transfer by Technicolor. It was later re-cut back in the Colonies.
The OCN, with all it's inherent dupes, was well-loved over the years, with an analogue restoration performed c. 1989-90 by UCLA's Robert Gitt.
Guns is a film that looks at good as it possibly can in 4k, with the addition of HDR, which is okay. It's very much an "it is what it is" film.
Is it a film that deserves a 4k release? That's the question. What has been gained over a new image harvest presented via a new Blu-ray.
Color is generally fine, with dupes looking as precisely what they are. Grain (the film was shot on the new 5250 stock) is inherent, and the imagery imparts the normal deficiencies of non-panavision anamorphic optics of the era.
Still a superb film, that stands up nicely to test of time, as does the original stereo mix, now with Dolby Atmos added, which enlivens the proscenium.
Sony (Columbia) has just updated Navarone with the addition Dolby Vision and a new very attractive Steelbook, the artwork of which feels decidedly Japanese as opposed to German. Updated stats below:
Image – 4 (Dolby Vision)
Audio – 5 (Dolby Atmos)
Pass / Fail – Pass
Plays nicely with projectors - Yes
Makes use of and works well in 4k - 3
Upgrade from Blu-ray - Yes
Worth your attention - 8
Slipcover rating - 6 (Steelbook)
Highly Recommended
RAH
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