El Skutto
Super Freak
I'll buy 'em regardless. There are enough subtle differences between the theatrical versions and the extended editions that I feel compelled to have both sets. The way Saruman's end is handled, for example.
I liked The Digital Bits' review. Seems to put it all in perspective.
https://www.thedigitalbits.com/reviewshd/bdreviews032310.html#lor
As much as I like The Digital Bits, their perspective on this case is just wrong. LOTR can look better. It has already been proven on several forums that a HDTV-broadcast from 2002 exhibits more detail than the current blu-ray release. The problems lies not with the original mastering done during post-production, but clearly with New Line's consistent business of applying unnecessary digital tampering to their releases. There's little doubt an old master has been used on this released, and cleaned up to horrible results (DNR).
https://comparescreenshots.slicx.com/comparison.php?id=43823
https://comparescreenshots.slicx.com/comparison.php?id=43820
Or take a look at these beauties:
https://img35.imageshack.us/img35/1523/00005m2tssnapshot011118.png
https://img691.imageshack.us/img691/6025/00005m2tssnapshot011055.png
I've been able to view these discs myself, and if you are buying these expecting top-notch picture quality, you will be disappointed. What you're seeing on these screencaps isn't just a singled-out case, this kind of artifacting/smearing is persistent and recurring throughout all three films - Fellowship suffering the most.
BTW, WB/New Line actually demanded blu-ray.com to remove their screenshots from their review:
https://forum.blu-ray.com/3082372-post5698.html
https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/The-Lord-of-the-Rings-The-Motion-Picture-Trilogy-Blu-ray-Review/5174/
On those first set of pics, it says if you have the mouse OFF the pic, it's blu ray, if your mouse is on the pic, it's hd. Looks better on blu ray to me!
On those first set of pics, it says if you have the mouse OFF the pic, it's blu ray, if your mouse is on the pic, it's hd. Looks better on blu ray to me!
Whether this is an issue with their processing of the original or not is a different question, one NOT answered by those screen shots. Why? Because I can tell you that if I got the version without DNR, I wouldn't be happy either. I don't like to see that much noise, and that wouldn't be an acceptable transfer. What that actually implies to me is that the version with the noise is the best they could do from the master, and New Line decided to use DNR (thus softening it) to make it less pixelated. If there's a ton of digital noise or pixaltion in the original recording, then you're pretty screwed. That issue gets worse the bigger the screen gets, and I wish we could get some idea of what equipment the reviewers were using. I can tell you that the noise you see in the HD broadcast version would look atrocious on a screen over 65" or so.
As a good visual example, take a look at this comparison of The Good, The Bad and the Ugly on blu-ray. The American blu-ray version uses a source that has been grain-reduced and tampered with to further extent - resulting in a 'smooth picture'. The Italian blu-ray was newly sourced from the original film-print, and kept untouched. Notice the difference in detail? The obvious change in accuracy of the colours?
https://comparescreenshots.slicx.com/comparison/32650/picture:6
I love people who are snobs over subjects like this
I'm not talking about film grain - that is noise, but it's not 'digital' noise. And because YOU think the image looks better with digital noise than without is your personal preference. To act as though that means anyone else is somehow clueless makes you a snob, not informed.
Here's the best part - you think I prefer the smoothed image. I didn't say a non-dnr'ed version was unacceptable - I said a version with excessive noise was. There's a huge difference. I don't prefer an over processed image. And I'm EXTREMELY picky when it comes to video (and audiio) quality. I've used the same ISF calibrator for over 10 years now, and he's come to expect my picky ways. But I'm not enough of a snob to think that my opinion on how the film should look is the right one for everyone, and I'm not surprised when people prefer the less sharp but less noisy image. I see the same thing with photos all the time.
It looks like I will be sticking with my HD recordings for a while.
I'll buy 'em regardless. There are enough subtle differences between the theatrical versions and the extended editions that I feel compelled to have both sets. The way Saruman's end is handled, for example.
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