What is the worst Disney DVD transfer you've ever seen!?
-
That1GuyPictures
What is the worst Disney DVD transfer you've ever seen!?
I'm trying to take a poll of what the worst Disney DVD transfer you've ever seen is. Right now, I think the one that I was most dissapointed in was A Goofy Movie. It was in fullscreen, and was a bad PAL downconversion. But then again, I thought Homeward Bound was pretty bad too. Not in Widescreen, and terrible picture. (But hey it was one of Disney's first 2 releases) Either that or The Black Cauldron. I was so excited about it finally coming to video, then to laserdisc (Which got cancelled) and then to finally to a widescreen DVD. The DVD however wasn't 16x9 enhanced, and was way too sharp in some areas, and had a lot of transfer problems including grain, edge enhancement, and film artifacts galore. What is your least favorite Disney DVD transfer?
- Escapay
- Ultimate Collector's Edition
- Posts: 12562
- Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
- Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
- Contact:
I don't have much Disney DVDs, but while The Rocketeer gets bonus points for being OAR, the transfer is as bad as it says in the Review.
http://www.ultimatedisney.com/rocketeer.html
http://www.ultimatedisney.com/rocketeer.html
EscapayThe Review for The Rocketeer wrote:The Rocketeer is nicely photographed and makes fine use of the 2.20:1 widescreen frame (the packaging and other reviews claim it's 2.35:1, but it's not). Unfortunately, the word that comes to mind in describing this DVD transfer is "murky." It's as if the film is covered by a layer of film, and everything seems more distant and than it should be. It lacks the sharpness and clarity it should have, and while there are no distracting flaws or inconsistencies, the film would very much stand to benefit from a new anamorphic transfer. As it is, it's an overly dark transfer that is pretty disappointing.
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?
WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?
WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
<i>Blackbeard's Ghost</i> is pretty atrocious. <i>Journey of Natty Gann</i> is a pan-and-scan of a 2.35:1 film and not a very good looking transfer. <i>Family Band</i>'s transfer was weak, so was <i>The Happiest Millionaire</i>. Those four come to mind.
"Fifteen years from now, when people are talking about 3-D, they will talk about the business before 'Monsters vs. Aliens' and the business after 'Monsters vs. Aliens.' It's the line in the sand." - Greg Foster, IMAX chairman and president
-
That1GuyPictures
- The Monkey's Uncle
- Gold Classic Collection
- Posts: 140
- Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 10:18 am
- Location: United States
-
lolopimp
-
That1GuyPictures
That's exactly what I thought! (But I thought If I mentioned it others would disagree.)lolopimp wrote:Not the worst, but I was really disappointed at it- Beauty and the Beast Special Edition. I hate those artifacts that disturb the picture ever 10 secs!!
There are way too many artifacts on that disc...
I wish they would have moved some of the other supplements,
and maybe the work in progress edition over to the other disc, where
the film could have recieved more attention.
Oh well.
- Disney Guru
- Platinum Edition
- Posts: 3294
- Joined: Thu Nov 20, 2003 5:31 pm
- Location: Utah
Hmm
The worst DVD release I think was on One ANd Only Genuine Origional Family Band, it was so grainy. I compared it with the White Puffy 1983 White Clamshell VHS Edition of that movie which I own. THe VHS was even better quality then the stupid dvd, the only good thing about the dvd was it included the Family Band Album.
"I have this tremendous energy. I just loved and love life. I love it today. I never want to die."
~Jayne Meadows Allen~
~Jayne Meadows Allen~
- Sh00tingstar
- Limited Issue
- Posts: 90
- Joined: Sat Oct 09, 2004 3:23 am
i agree pocahnotas is poorly served in its current dvd release.
it was such a good style in the cinema, with its lines and simplicity, but on the dvd it looked soooo flat and 2d.
also the powerful colours used in many of the crucial scenes just looked really really bad.
roll on pocahontas SE!!
it was such a good style in the cinema, with its lines and simplicity, but on the dvd it looked soooo flat and 2d.
also the powerful colours used in many of the crucial scenes just looked really really bad.
roll on pocahontas SE!!
"When the stars fall I will lie awake...You're my Shootingstar..."
- Jungleprince_55
- Gold Classic Collection
- Posts: 420
- Joined: Sun Aug 29, 2004 10:16 pm
- Location: Florida
- Joe Carioca
- Collector's Edition
- Posts: 2039
- Joined: Fri Jun 13, 2003 5:05 pm
- Location: Brazil
As far as the animated films go, I'd certainly call "Pocahontas" Gold Collection the most disappointing. Besides not being anamorphically enhanced, the print used is extremely grainy, specially for such a recent film. Besides, the colors look murky and detail is poor, which is a shame considering that this is one of the greatest-looking Disney animated films.
All of the animated movies from the eighties but "The Great Mouse Detective" don't look very good either, specially "The Black Cauldron" (which makes me even more curious to see how good the French anamorphic edition is).
All of the animated movies from the eighties but "The Great Mouse Detective" don't look very good either, specially "The Black Cauldron" (which makes me even more curious to see how good the French anamorphic edition is).
- deathie mouse
- Ultraviolet Edition
- Posts: 1391
- Joined: Thu Jun 10, 2004 1:12 am
- Location: Alea jacta est
I think of the discs I have. the one that has the most obvious transfer "defect" is Brother Bear, with the (very slight on my system) color banding, which some viewers don't see on their systems. I've seen high res sourced pics (but still 8bit) of Brother Bear and they also have the banding, so I think it may be an error of how the software encodes 8bit files from the higher bit CAPS data. The disc's image and color look so good anyway that i don't mind the slight banding i ocasionally see in a couple of shots. But my Disney DVD collection is still in its embryonic stage so i haven't seen that many DVDs. Yet.
Of the Laserdiscs I have, if anyone cares, I think that the Musicland (im not sure if that was the name of the short) and Lambert The Sheepish Lion shorts on the Prince and the Pauper disc had very faded colors that neeeded boosting up a lot. (Prince was fine).
The Beauty and The Beast Special Editions 2099net and I have, which do include the Work In Progress version, look free of artifacts, and in fact is one of the best DVDs i have. 2099net and i discussed this a little on an older thread.
Of the Laserdiscs I have, if anyone cares, I think that the Musicland (im not sure if that was the name of the short) and Lambert The Sheepish Lion shorts on the Prince and the Pauper disc had very faded colors that neeeded boosting up a lot. (Prince was fine).
The R1/4 NTSC disc doesn't come with the Work In Progress version, so it may have a less compressed/bigger file version of the movie than the R1 NTSC disc. I haven't personally checked this out yet.lolopimp wrote:Not the worst, but I was really disappointed at it- Beauty and the Beast Special Edition. I hate those artifacts that disturb the picture ever 10 secs!!
and That1GuyPictures wrote:
That's exactly what I thought! (But I thought If I mentioned it others would disagree.)
There are way too many artifacts on that disc...
I wish they would have moved some of the other supplements,
and maybe the work in progress edition over to the other disc, where
the film could have recieved more attention.
Oh well.
The Beauty and The Beast Special Editions 2099net and I have, which do include the Work In Progress version, look free of artifacts, and in fact is one of the best DVDs i have. 2099net and i discussed this a little on an older thread.

-
drnilescrane
- Gold Classic Collection
- Posts: 268
- Joined: Wed Jun 30, 2004 5:48 am
If you want to boycott the special features for a good flick get the Australasian version. It was re-shot in widescreen and got a good treatment. But as I said no special features and bad cover-art... Wait, this is disney! Cover-art should always be done by somebody who has never seen the film! AEGM has a pic of Max with goofy eyes and the whole of the Goof Troop series Goofy had max eyes!Jungleprince_55 wrote:A Goofy Movie
Realy, they should get the animators to do the cover-art, just pass it around like a get well card then send it off to be coloured.
- Escapay
- Ultimate Collector's Edition
- Posts: 12562
- Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
- Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
- Contact:
Re: Hmm
A 21 year old VHS played probably over 100 times has better quality that a new (albeit P&S) DVD? As John Stossell (of 20/20) would say, "Give me a break!"Disney Guru wrote:The worst DVD release I think was on One ANd Only Genuine Origional Family Band, it was so grainy. I compared it with the White Puffy 1983 White Clamshell VHS Edition of that movie which I own. THe VHS was even better quality then the stupid dvd, the only good thing about the dvd was it included the Family Band Album.
Escapay
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?
WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?
WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
-
That1GuyPictures
Re: Hmm
Regaurdless of the format, they are two seperate transfers, and the VHS transfer though made many years ago has better color and looks more natrual than the very grainy transfer with bad color on the DVD.Escapay wrote:A 21 year old VHS played probably over 100 times has better quality that a new (albeit P&S) DVD? As John Stossell (of 20/20) would say, "Give me a break!"Disney Guru wrote:The worst DVD release I think was on One ANd Only Genuine Origional Family Band, it was so grainy. I compared it with the White Puffy 1983 White Clamshell VHS Edition of that movie which I own. THe VHS was even better quality then the stupid dvd, the only good thing about the dvd was it included the Family Band Album.
Escapay
The fact that the VHS may look better in someways is becuase the VHS hides some of the print problems but displays a better color pattern. The DVD looks worse because all the print problems are on full display, and the film looks older becuase the print itself is 21 years older than that VHS release. The VHS master may have deteriorated less that the film print that they used to master the new DVD which was possibly done recently (although I have doubts about that.) However, DVD always has better picture quality from a compression and resolution technique. However there are some movies that have a better VHS transfer than a DVD transfer...and that is a great misfortune indeed.
Understand?
- Escapay
- Ultimate Collector's Edition
- Posts: 12562
- Joined: Tue Jan 27, 2004 5:02 pm
- Location: Somewhere in Time and Space
- Contact:
Re: Hmm
More or less...I think I understand. Nevertheless, it's a sad day when a 21 year old VHS has better quality than a new DVD.That1GuyPictures wrote:Regaurdless of the format, they are two seperate transfers, and the VHS transfer though made many years ago has better color and looks more natrual than the very grainy transfer with bad color on the DVD.Escapay wrote: A 21 year old VHS played probably over 100 times has better quality that a new (albeit P&S) DVD? As John Stossell (of 20/20) would say, "Give me a break!"
Escapay
The fact that the VHS may look better in someways is becuase the VHS hides some of the print problems but displays a better color pattern. The DVD looks worse because all the print problems are on full display, and the film looks older becuase the print itself is 21 years older than that VHS release. The VHS master may have deteriorated less that the film print that they used to master the new DVD which was possibly done recently (although I have doubts about that.) However, DVD always has better picture quality from a compression and resolution technique. However there are some movies that have a better VHS transfer than a DVD transfer...and that is a great misfortune indeed.
Understand?
Escapay
WIST #60:
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?
WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
AwallaceUNC: Would you prefer Substi-Blu-tiary Locomotion?
WIST #61:
TheSequelOfDisney: Damn, did Lin-Manuel Miranda go and murder all your families?
- deathie mouse
- Ultraviolet Edition
- Posts: 1391
- Joined: Thu Jun 10, 2004 1:12 am
- Location: Alea jacta est
It's incredibly frustrating when you get a newly minted DVD and the transfer/picture quality is worse than the previous dvd or LD or VHS or even TV station prints you've seen before. Makes you think: if that's the best they could do, why didn't they just use the previous, better looking master?
For example, if the VHS of the One ANd Only Genuine Origional Family Band looks better, there must exist at least a FULL NTSC resolution BROADCAST quality MASTER of it which would at least look TWICE the quality of the VHS. Sometimes I've gone out of my way to tape "old" transfers" shown on TV cus they look better than the current "digitally remastered" versions...
For example, if the VHS of the One ANd Only Genuine Origional Family Band looks better, there must exist at least a FULL NTSC resolution BROADCAST quality MASTER of it which would at least look TWICE the quality of the VHS. Sometimes I've gone out of my way to tape "old" transfers" shown on TV cus they look better than the current "digitally remastered" versions...

-
That1GuyPictures
I know that the Archive Edition Laserdisc transfer of Mary Poppins that I have in 1.66:1 was far more superior in color (And even framing) when compared to the 1.85:1 DVD edition which lops off the top and bottom slightly. (I'm still scratching my head on that one.)
Where the DVD surpasses the laserdisc though is in the area of artifacts.
The laserdisc is full of film artifacts, but the colors and framing are far more superior. The DVD is a port from the MASTERPIECE edition laserdisc transfer which included hardly any artifacts at all, but had very poor color timing and was improperly framed. Oh well...it's a mute point now, for it shall all be resolved (Hopefully) on this new 40th anniversary edition.
But part of me wonders why Disney didn't use the Archive Laserdisc transfer...maybe because it was older. I wish they'd have compared them...they might have chosen differently.
Where the DVD surpasses the laserdisc though is in the area of artifacts.
The laserdisc is full of film artifacts, but the colors and framing are far more superior. The DVD is a port from the MASTERPIECE edition laserdisc transfer which included hardly any artifacts at all, but had very poor color timing and was improperly framed. Oh well...it's a mute point now, for it shall all be resolved (Hopefully) on this new 40th anniversary edition.
But part of me wonders why Disney didn't use the Archive Laserdisc transfer...maybe because it was older. I wish they'd have compared them...they might have chosen differently.
