 
 None of the designs of Belle show her with red hair, anyway, and there are flaws in the picture that would sure as hell not be in the CAPS files.
Why? What's your baseline reference for the OTV: memory? I saw the film in theatres and I'm not going to trust <i>my</i> memory with respect to color grading in various home media releases, so why should I trust yours?Marky_198 wrote:No, you don't understand me. What I mean to say is "I don't care what people say the original look was/is" because we don't have real proof (although it's quite obvious).
<b>I firmly believe I know which version is closer to the OTV...</b>
I respect the people who created the OTV and their right to see their work as a living, evolving thing for as long as they want. I also trust they'll be closely involved (those who are still with us) with the fall 2010 release.Marky_198 wrote:I do care about respecting the OTV. And there are some people on this board that seem to have no problem with this modifications, and don't care about the differences at all. Opinions like that deserve minimal consideration, because they don't have respect for the classics in the first place.
I think it really has all to do with opinion. Me, I would rather have the colors it was originally released with- that's what people remember. If the filmmakers couldn't afford a certain palette for the movie and they must create it using certain colors, then it should stay like that. To me, it just all goes back to who remembers what and I believe the most important thing is they should leave it be for those who remember how they watched and loved it. It's just like dubbing. A lot of people liked the old My Neighbor Totoro dub better because they grew up with it so anything changed might shift their opinion on the film and ruin their memory of it.Flanger-Hanger wrote:Any disagreeing is just meaningless fan whining.

Interesting, if completely off-topic:drfsupercenter wrote:He [Spielberg] used the same digital restoration service as George Lucas, but yet nobody's complaining about Indiana Jones.
Food for thought.Jeff Kleist wrote:The Indiana Jones Trilogy ALMOST streeted last year with Indy 4, but at the last minute was nixed because the masters simply weren't up to snuff. It was literally killed at the final go/no go point. Now work was being done on these as early as June 2008, so all signs pointed to them coming. I would have felt really bad if we'd said something as dear to everyone's hearts as Indy was on the way and then it didn't happen. Whatever we get this fall is going to be much better than those discs would have been, and that's great news for everyone.

Because all the promotional material directly from the studio from that time, all the official screenshots of the OTV, all the original books I have from that time, everything that was ever released looked exactly like the laserdisc version. And nothing that ever existed (or at least anyone has ever seen) looked even a bit like the DVD version.Anton Ego wrote:
Why? What's your baseline reference for the OTV: memory? I saw the film in theatres and I'm not going to trust <i>my</i> memory with respect to color grading in various home media releases, so why should I trust yours?
I respect the people who created the OTV and their right to see their work as a living, evolving thing for as long as they want. I also trust they'll be closely involved (those who are still with us) with the fall 2010 release.






Except that I don't care about the Indiana Jones trilogy on Blu-Ray. It DOES look good enough from the DVDs.Interesting, if completely off-topic:
About this time last year I actually said out loud to my next door neighbor that there'd be an Indiana Jones boxset on Blu-ray by Christmas (2008). It seemed obvious: the 4th film was coming out in theaters alongside a trilogy DVD re-release in summer, surely it would be a 4th-quarter killer on hi-def home media.
Now that the set has finally been teased (if not announced), Jeff Kleist from thedigitalbits.com has let it slip in the bits' blu-ray.com thread that it was planned for 2008 and called off at the last possible moment: the quality of the DVD re-releases notwithstanding, it became apparent that the masters weren't good enough for Blu-ray:
No, I completely get what you're saying... but I highly doubt the differences caused by theater setups will be as drastic as the difference between the VHS/laserdisc and DVD releases. I think if they did a TRUE conversion from CAPS that didn't involve screwing with the colors, aspect ratio, timing, and just about everything else... people would think it looks a lot like the OTV.2099Net sighs, because he knows like all other posts, this will be ignored, as people refer back to their VHS copies, convinced they show the "true" colours, and all "old" films are meant to look unclear and worn.
I was actually thinking of doing something like this myself too. Only instead of setting up a filter and applying it to the entire film like you did, I wanted to take certain screenshots and make them fit the laserdisc colors... and see if they do indeed still look flat/lifeless compared to the laserdisc. I have a feeling they will.so it took me a couple minutes but i found a way to take the dvd caps and convert them to the VHS colors. it was quite easy actually. the RGB was off so I tweaked it a bit, then I found that the red level itself has been greatly decreased in the VHS caps. here's some examples of what the VHS colors would look like in DVD quality. now mind you if the film had not been edited (and there are many different things that could have been done so don't quote me on this) but.. if it was kept in it's CAPS files these preset levels I set up should apply to the whole film and convert it to the same colors as the VHS. It did not however.. ie: the ballroom cap. Mind you these only get it close, and with the artifacts and the pixilation things get highlighted oddly and who knows what all is there that shouldnt but, but here you go.








If it makes you happy, then, I can just take the unaltered DVD frames and save them as bitmaps. It's not an issue of screencap software. DVDs are essentially a series of compressed bitmap images played back at a certain speed. Since all of Disney's animated DVDs are progressive, there's not even interlacing to worry about. I can just save each frame as a bitmap and there won't be any of that RGB crap you're talking about.Note: NTSC has never been able to show full RGB. Most computer monitors do (i.e. 0-255). Most screen captures from DVDs are done on computers, and most software defaults to full RGB. Meanwhile, analogue inputs, even on computers, are configured for NTSC.
Again looking at this picture, which has THE EXACT SAME DIGITAL IMAGE, but with different RGB setting, can you see how it compares to the LD screencaps? The actual image itself was not altered in any way.
Obviously you're a Blu-Ray fanboy... and it's not a restoration! You can't restore something that's inherently digital to begin with! (And keep in mind, the CAPS files are larger than Blu-Ray so it doesn't even NEED any fixing to be in high definition)Blu-ray, like IMAX will show this restoration for what it really is in sharpness and colour. The DVD probably doesn't even come close.
And why do you think I'm doing my own preservations on DVD from other sources? People complain about "those darn pirates" like me but it's Disney's own fault there for not releasing the original to begin with. Obviously there's also quite a large fandom of the OTV.You as the consumer still have the choice to watch which version you want. If it's not on your preferred format, again it's your loss (not theirs) and whining and complaining will likely not change anything. Ironically while some complain and want the "original" look they are going back again to the film and putting it into 3-D. Maybe i another 10 years we will have the Smell-O vision re-issue but that's fine to. Don't like it? Don't watch it.
Precisely. Don Hahn, who's the producer of both Beauty and the Beast and The Lion King said TLK would have the OTV on its DVD, saying the fanboys have nothing to worry about. And look what happened. Disney is lying through their teeth a lot when it comes to home videos (they do it all the time with "original" aspect ratios too), and that's mainly why I have an issue with the fake OTV on both DVDs.On the DVD, if you watch the original theatrical version, it still isn't the original theatrical version. I know that Cogsworth's animation was changed in one scene, and the Beast's stuttering was removed, and I swear that I read the new backgrounds of the cleaned up palace are in it too, instead of the original wrecked ones. So anyway, the original theatrical version just isn't on the DVD. Disney lied.
See, that's the whole reason behind me feeling the way I do about this. I have no problem with "special editions"... and for that matter I actually like Human Again. What pisses me off, though, is when they either don't release the OTV, or even worse... when they just release a watered-down modified version and call it the OTV.But if they said, "this is not the original version, but the version the filmakers want", with all this changed stuff and bright colors, okay, they can put that on. That's OK.
But the right or wrong here is, shouldn't they also make the original theatrical version available? I know that it probably isn't quite as dark as it was on VHS, but it is very much probably not how bright it is on DVD.
See, when it comes to colors... I don't think either one is perfect. The DVD is off simply because we all know they changed it. The laserdisc/VHS is off just because at the time they couldn't just encode the CAPS files, and it had to be telecined somehow. And likely some detail was lost due to that. I prefer the laserdisc colors a bit more since they're likely closer to what they should be, but I'm not saying they're *THE* OTV colors, either.Remember everyone talking about the scene where the Beast comes into the light, but you can already see him clearly before that, thanks to the brightened DVD? Well...I don't see, at all, how the filmakers could have wanted that! Likewise, I think you can too easily see the beast when he first appears on the DVD, where he discovers Maurice in his chair, whereas he was much scarier, and more mysterious, in his less visible, darker version on the VHS and Laserdisc. Not to mention, the filmakers most definately wanted the film to look dark as they wanted the story and everything else about the film to be a darker fairy tale.
True, we don't know anything... but I know Disney is incredibly cheap and lazy when it comes to releasing videos now, and if they already have this "restored" version wouldn't it make sense they'll just release it again?And who said that not all 3 versions (original, like real original, SE and work-in-progress) will be included on the DVD/BD next year?
We don't know anything about this release yet, so I think people should just calm down for now.
We don't know what a direct port of CAPS will look like, as they haven't done it!Even a direct port of the CAPS files on DVD (and especially Blu-ray) will not show that ill defined look and generally darker you seem so obsessed about. I suggest you stop moaning and just get someone like drf to put a copy of that file onto DVD for you and stop bothering everyone with you repetitive, ineffective arguments.
 
 Well, I have the VHS as well, and I did do a recording to DVD. It's a little worn but I think it looks better than some of the screencaps here. See for yourself from this one here:And no, there is no such thing as a none worn out VHS. Even If you never played it the tape is likely to deteriorate over time (it's been 17 years since it's release).
