Marky_198 wrote:2099net wrote:
When Cinderella came out it was new. It looked bright and new because it was.
I've never read anything so ignorant and arrogant before than this before on such a thread, especially considering Technicolor was famous for its stunning brilliant colour in the 1930's 1940s and 1950s.
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You don't get it.
Do you really think that "1950's new" looks the same as "2008 new"?
It doesn't, that's the whole point.
I said I wasn't going to post again, but I can't let this pass.
I have a book with technicolor screenshots from the classics.
Although the colors are brilliant, it doesn't look anything like the 2005 version. The colors used just dind't exist back then. Look at all the other movies, pictures, screencaps, prints from that time and you'll see it.
In other words, you're confused. Stunning and brilliant meant something else back then and what people were used to is different than what it is now.
OK, when was this book you keep mentioning published? The 1990's? The 1980's? Beacuse anything from the 1980's backwards ISN'T going to be the same as such a book if it was published today.
I know its hard to understand, but technology
improves. While today, most books are probably printed with industrial printers similar to the laser printers we have on our everyday personal computers today, in the past (and indeed still today for large print run items), printing was/is done by copper plates.
Read
http://www.wmich.edu/pci/gravure/ for more information on copper plate printing. Notice how before computer engraving was introduced in the early/mid-80s the whole process of creating a copper plate was done basically by what is essentially a photographic process (chemical and light based).
Now in order for such a process to reproduce exactly what was intended, not only would the chemical and UV light exposure have to be carefully calibrated and monitored, but so would so many other variables during the actual printing (that the paper absorbed the correct amount of each ink, that the consistency of each coloured ink was the same, that pressure of the plate against the paper was always consistant… etc). Basically, you're looking at many, many variables which will affect the final printed page and colours that to expect them to be 100% accurate is – well, expecting a heck of a lot. Each and every single one of these variables could be calibrated incorrectly due to human or mechanical error. How often do you think everything was absolutely perfect on each and every step? How often do you think colours were reproduced absolutely 100% as a result?
The fact that there is such a scope for colour errors is why different print-runs of stamps for example often have different shades and colours. (Go ask a stamp collector about this).
At least with printing these days and computer assistance, it's more unlikely any aspect of the process will be calibrated incorrectly.
And the same argument is true of cinematic restorations today, which is why I don't accept arguments like "The 19xx restoration was only just done, and it looks totally different". Technology improves. As technology improves, we can do more.
Watch the Wizard of Oz restoration documentary on the new DVD and Warners say that the restoration of the film to that standard wasn't possible before because they never had the technology to do it. If that's true of Warners, then why isn't that true of Disney? The tools available for the restoration vastly improve over just a few short years. It's Moore's Law applied to digital imaging rather than just computing as a whole.
And I know how fast technology in this field changes, just by reading about tools used in the restoration of the Doctor Who episodes on the Restoration Team's forum (you'll be surprised at some of the tools currently being developed and tested – such as a way to retain the original colours from B/W film copies)
And it's not arrogant, it's just the way it is. Any fool can see that the look of the movie is far too modern for what the movie actually is.
No, any fool cannot, because any fool wasn't alive in 195x to see Cinderella or Sleeping Beauty or whatever film on it's big premiere night.
If people don't care about that or don't see that, or agree they make the movie look modern and like it was made yesterday while it's not, it says something about their ignorane or passion for the modern technical evolution.
http://www.afi.com/about/preservation/a ... aspx#color
I suggest you read this too -
AFI wrote:Virtually all current production for film and television today consists of color film in single strip emulsion. It has been learned from bitter experience that, unlike the earlier three-strip Technicolor process, today's color film can fade irretrievably in as little as five years. The gradual shifting of color values can advance quickly to a point at which the original release quality cannot be recovered without making compromises in contrast, definition, and overall image quality.
OK, Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty's negatives may exist in three-strip Technicolor (I expect that they do) but the prints being shown at the theatres didn't. And when Cinderella was re-released to the theatres every 7 years or so, do you think Disney went to the expense of creating new film prints, or just recycled the old ones?
But the AFI say after even 5 years, the colour could be compromised!
And then we come to TV and VHS showings. Things are slightly different today, but in the days when films were released on TV and VHS constantly in full screen pan and scan format, the public didn't demand the highest quality. They've only really started to demand this since the introduction of DVDs and reviewers started to actively critisise picture and/or sound quality. Ever see a VHS review critisise the quality of the image or sound?
Again, technology improved, and people expected to take advantage of the improvement themselves, so became more critical.
How many VHS tapes can you think of that boasted "an all new transfer" or "all new restoration"? Yes, there were a few, but what exactly did "restoration" mean in the 1980s or 1990s? A new print taken from the negative? Removal of dirt and scratches from an exsiting transfer? If a new print was taken from the negative, how were the colours decided upon it what is essentially a chemical process? What tools did they use? What tools had been developed?
You can't compare something restored and/or transferred in the 1980s or 1990s to either [a] the original as it was seen on day one and
any restorations or new transfers produced today.