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Comments
Many of those movies can be restored, remastered and/or repaired to the very best results.
Nowadays old movies get remastered in 4K even, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang for example.
In a few years (if that long) we will be able to watch movies of the 40's in real 4K resolution for example, and I don't mean upconverted but real 4K.
High Definition never was in the mind of moviemakers up to the nineties I think.
Especially on television. Many TV-Shows were taped which is the most horrible crime ever committed.
Such shows will never be seen in HD. Not without most expensive and harrowing restoring processes.
Star Trek TNG was painstakingly re-made really. They used the original film roles, had to search for the right takes and put all of them together again, edit it correctly etc.
But that's an exception, because it is Trek, enough people will buy it and make it profitable.
I think what might have been done differently in the past might be CGI in the nineties. Many moviemakers didn't use models anymore, but CGI. That's the reason why nineties movies that used CGI look horrible in High Definition as CGI can't be shown in a higher resolution than it has been made back then. They would have to re-do it all.
If you look at Sci-Fi movies of the past, all those using models can be remastered in 4K without losing any quality.
One of the main reasons that the cult show Babylon 5 hasn't been released in HD is the problem of CGI not possible to master in 4K. It would have to be upconverted and that doesn't look good at all.
Nowadays movies get made with 3D in mind. You can see if a director chooses a scene only for a 3D effect, something that I find troubling.
Luckily some directors refuse to do 3D.
And do you think some movies had better been left untouched? I'm thinking of the rage (luckily long gone) of coloring B&W movies, with hideous results. Another technology, but your mention of nineties CGI in HD made me think of that.
For example the Hitchcock classics, how can I ever watch them again in Standard Resolution on DVD? I can't, once I've seen them on Blu-ray, there was no turning back :)
As for colouring B+W movies, that was a crime, really. I do own a coloured season of I Dream Of Jeannie, absolutely horrible.
Altering CGI can be something that helps a movie or puts another perspective to it.
For example Star Trek The Motion Picture was re-done by its director. A bit of Nip and Tuck, some added scenes, some altered special effects. The result is imho great.
The same to a much larger extend happened to the original Star Wars movies.
Personally I couldn't watch the untouched versions anymore, but I guess for people that have seen them originally at the cinema that's a different story.
Aside from Bond in 1978 when Superman came out everyone raved about the special effects (you'll believe a man can fly). It was amazing to watch.
Now? Not so impressive.
I was too young to see them at the cinema, but I always watch the originals.
Are you seriously saying this...
Is better than this...
I despair.
@BondJasonBond006 you do realise that 35mm film is a higher resolution that 1080p? CGI used in 1990s films on Blu Ray is actually presented in a lower resolution than originally in cinemas.
Both scenes are horrible. That's no argument for the untouched versions.
The way they filmed that was actually quite impressive.
That's not the point, besides I don't believe the original is horrible. Far from it. It's completely bizarre, which is part of its charm.
And do not tell me this...
Is better than this...
Pissing about with such a historically important film is like building a Barratt Homes extension on a listed building.