Ed Bishop
03-05-2003, 02:55 PM
A Pleasant DVD Surprise
If redbook CD's have become a sonic minefield in recent years, the DVD, if anything, has been, in my experience thus far, more consistent and satisfying in terms of visual and sound quality(AHDN and the ABBA comp excepted:sigh: ). There just isn't the high screwup ratio here that we keep getting with remastered CD's. Apparently the format itself is responsible. To my surprise, we keep getting correctly letterboxed images(where applicable)and, on the main, sound that ranges from fair(for older films)to phenomenal(for some films and music vids, ranging from flat mono to DD 5.1 and DTS 5.1).
Since my brother, ahem, didn't quite come through with THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL--the company didn't send any to his store despite his constant e-mails and phone calls, and nobody in town had it, either--I was forced:p to console myself with the 2-disc remaster of THE THREE and FOUR MUSKETEERS, the pair of Richard Lester films from '73 & '74. Although he would go on to direct more movies, IMO these really were the last good films he would do.
What I dug about the films back in the day was Lester's sense of fun and exuberance, something very apparent in AHDN, to a lesser degree in HELP! and all but absent in too many of his subsequent efforts. Spontaneity was always his strongest suit, and this pair of films can seem, if you're unfamiliar with them, a little excessive in terms of stunts, pratfalls, and other visual nonsense. But as both feature some of the best work of all involved, this makes for a great bargain at $17.99.
The image is correctly letterboxed in british camera ratio to around 1.80(1.77, says the box; close enough)and looks stunning, given how crappy looking both have appeared on home video and TV in the past. Very little artifacting or any kind of picture problems; not much in the way of film stock age, meaning, I hope, the original camera negatives were found(sometimes very hard to locate with some 'international' productions).
The sound, thankfully, is in flat mono; cleaned up, but not excessively so.
The usual extras(featurettes, trailers, TV & radio spots, still galleries, cast bios)round out a very impressively presented package.
Everything else aside, any films that have Raquel Welch not only visually striking but indeed doing a good job of acting--something she normally wasn't required to do--are to be reckoned with. The question of "Whatever happened to Simon Ward?" remains unanswered, but attentive viewers will note a brief appearance by Frank Thornton(from the BBC's ARE YOU BEING SERVED? comedy show from the '70s, and who also turned up in other Lester films now and again). And as it pretty much ends with Faye Dunaway's character literally losing her head, well, very satisfying; great rainy afternoon fare.
This now concludes my first Visual Arts contribution. I will now attempt to locate the suddenly missing 'Music Archives' button:D
ED:cool:
If redbook CD's have become a sonic minefield in recent years, the DVD, if anything, has been, in my experience thus far, more consistent and satisfying in terms of visual and sound quality(AHDN and the ABBA comp excepted:sigh: ). There just isn't the high screwup ratio here that we keep getting with remastered CD's. Apparently the format itself is responsible. To my surprise, we keep getting correctly letterboxed images(where applicable)and, on the main, sound that ranges from fair(for older films)to phenomenal(for some films and music vids, ranging from flat mono to DD 5.1 and DTS 5.1).
Since my brother, ahem, didn't quite come through with THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL--the company didn't send any to his store despite his constant e-mails and phone calls, and nobody in town had it, either--I was forced:p to console myself with the 2-disc remaster of THE THREE and FOUR MUSKETEERS, the pair of Richard Lester films from '73 & '74. Although he would go on to direct more movies, IMO these really were the last good films he would do.
What I dug about the films back in the day was Lester's sense of fun and exuberance, something very apparent in AHDN, to a lesser degree in HELP! and all but absent in too many of his subsequent efforts. Spontaneity was always his strongest suit, and this pair of films can seem, if you're unfamiliar with them, a little excessive in terms of stunts, pratfalls, and other visual nonsense. But as both feature some of the best work of all involved, this makes for a great bargain at $17.99.
The image is correctly letterboxed in british camera ratio to around 1.80(1.77, says the box; close enough)and looks stunning, given how crappy looking both have appeared on home video and TV in the past. Very little artifacting or any kind of picture problems; not much in the way of film stock age, meaning, I hope, the original camera negatives were found(sometimes very hard to locate with some 'international' productions).
The sound, thankfully, is in flat mono; cleaned up, but not excessively so.
The usual extras(featurettes, trailers, TV & radio spots, still galleries, cast bios)round out a very impressively presented package.
Everything else aside, any films that have Raquel Welch not only visually striking but indeed doing a good job of acting--something she normally wasn't required to do--are to be reckoned with. The question of "Whatever happened to Simon Ward?" remains unanswered, but attentive viewers will note a brief appearance by Frank Thornton(from the BBC's ARE YOU BEING SERVED? comedy show from the '70s, and who also turned up in other Lester films now and again). And as it pretty much ends with Faye Dunaway's character literally losing her head, well, very satisfying; great rainy afternoon fare.
This now concludes my first Visual Arts contribution. I will now attempt to locate the suddenly missing 'Music Archives' button:D
ED:cool: