How about the transfers of films that looked great in theaters, but looks horrible on DVD? Are they rare cases of actual poor transfer, or is it the way the films are projected in theaters? Like they are somehow more forgiving?
NO mistake about it, there are definitely bad transfers. The thing to keep in mind is that artificial artifacts can and do find there way into most final transfers during any number of the chain of events from when the film was shot to the final transfer to video.
Whether they were caused during the actual filming (due to poor equipment, lighting, and or poor cinematographers, or those caused during post production editing, the creation of a digital intermediate, digital restoration work, and of course the telecine transfer (for film based material at least).
John Lowry, long considered one of the finest digital film restorers out there once properly identified over 300 different types of artificial artifacts that can be found regularly in most film transfers, and he was ble to prove how each one was and can be introduced during the long chain of events that go into making a film and bringing it to digital video.
As far as artifacts that can quickly be blamed on the actual transfer, and not the filming or post production of the film are things like edge enhancement, color banding and posterization, saturation, among others.
P.S. Have you guys seen any Kurosawa films on Blu-ray? Does it make sense to get films that old on Blu-ray? They(Criterion) had to do a lot of restoration, even on standard definition DVDs to make them presentable.
First fo all, you have GREAT taste in film directors! Akira Kurosawa is a genius, right up there with Kubrick, Hitchcock, and other masters of their craft.
Now as far as old films on Blu-ray/HD.... In practice, just because a film is old does not immediately determine whether it will look good in 1080p vs 480i/p and of course at much higher bit rates.
In fact there are some films that were shot 40-50 years ago that when the prints were new, were far more detailed and vivid that 99% of what we see today. Tragically, the last film to be shot entirely in 70mm (65mm technically speaking), was Keneth Branaughs epic version of Hamlet back in 1996, and before then very few films were with the exception of the "Golden Years" between 1955 and 1970.
However, most films now and as far back as 75 years ago have been shot on 35mm. Granted, the equipment, filming techniques, and post processing have improved over the years, and of course if the original film negatives were not properly cared for (and most were not), then naturally the quality suffers.
I guess what I'm saying is that you can't assume just because a film is older that it won't look as good as many modern films in HD. The fact is, in some cases where the original film was shot beautifully, and the negatives were well preserved, these films can often look far superior to any modern film on Blu-ray. 👍
BTW: Another great example of a very old film that looks absolutely amazing even on just DVD, is Sergio Leone's masterpiece
Once Upon a Time in the West:
Near the beginning of the film, Sergio, who loved to do close ups of his stars, zooms in on Henry Fonda's face... it's unbelievably detailed!
I can't wait for this film to make it onto Blu-ray!
I also had the pleasure of screening the new HD video re-master of
Lawrence of Arabia (also shot in 70/65mm), and I can tell you that it's one of the finest HD transfers I've ever seen. 👍
The newly remastered HD edition of Kubrick's
2001: A Space Odyssey is yet another example of an old film (in this case 40 years old), also originally shot entirely in 70/65mm that looks spectacular on Blu-ray!
Speaking of Blu-ray:
And anyone who is interested; there is a 25% off Blu-Rays at Deep Discount if you use one of the coupon codes provided by PS3Fanboy.
http://www.ps3fanboy.com/2008/11/07/oh-no-its-a-25-off-blu-ray-sale/
Thanks for the heads-up!
I think I'm going to order the following:
- Before the Devil Knows You're Dead
- Pirates of the Caribbean Trilogy
- Meet the Robinsons
- The Polar Express 2-D & 3-D
- Dark City (Director's Cut)
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day
- How the West Was Won
That's 9 Blu-ray films that list for $272 on sale for just $141! 👍
I also pre-ordered the
3-Disc Collectors Edition of Wall-E (+Digital Copy) at Amazon as they have a special going on right now.
While I was there I also pre-ordered this nice little nugget of gold: