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Maxwell Lord posted:You know, I wish more Blu-Ray manufacturers would realize that just because someone has an HDTV and player doesn't mean they have a 5.1+ sound system. Those things can be expensive and it sucks to have a big action scene sound weirdly quiet because they're assuming the presence of a subwoofer.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 00:36 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 00:51 |
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kuddles posted:Weird. I always have had the reverse problem. In order to hear the dialogue clearly enough, especially when people talk softly, I'm forced to have the volume loud enough that any onscreen action is insanely loud. My new 2.1 actually has an equalizer setting specifically to make voices clearer which has been a godsend. Same here, and while I'm happy that I'm usually able to compensate for the issue on my PC (I watch my Blu-rays on it using PowerDVD, with a 2.0 speaker setup or headphones), I nonetheless miss the 2.0 track most(?) DVDs used to have.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 01:33 |
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2.0 tracks wouldn't make the dynamic range any higher or lower. Again, most (all?) DVD & Blu-Ray players have a dynamic range compression setting to account for TV speakers or receivers that don't have the option. Turn it on to equalize loud and quiet. You will need to change the output settings to LPCM/Decode rather than Bitstream for it to take effect. DVD tracks aren't mixed any differently to Blu-Ray tracks, it's just that your old DVD player would have defaulted to DRC on and was probably hooked up via analog L/R. frumpsnake fucked around with this message at 02:22 on Sep 4, 2012 |
# ? Sep 4, 2012 02:07 |
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Egbert Souse posted:This is one case where the big box is actually worth it. Instead of putting trinkets and digital copies, the gift set has a substantial hardcover book (86 pages) and the original score on CD. It looks like all the extras from the previous 2-disc sets are intact, with the 1962 documentaries remastered, plus a new interview with Peter O'Toole and a deleted scene that was part of the original premiere cut. It also has a real 70mm frame, even if it's sort of a trinket. The bonus stuff is cool but I don't know if it's $50 cool. But at least we have a choice. If Warner would have done that for Citizen Kane, I probably would have bought it.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 03:47 |
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frumpsnake posted:That sounds more like some overzealous Dynamic Range Control setting on your TV or Blu-Ray player. I've fiddled with it both ways but it never quite works- even before I had HD and Blu-Ray, movies on DVD that only had a 5.1 mix did tend to be a little "soft" in the action scenes. Maybe I'm drifting too much into audiophile-ness.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 04:05 |
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Sporadic posted:The bonus stuff is cool but I don't know if it's $50 cool. There was a digipack edition of Citizen Kane without the big box junk.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 04:57 |
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Fag Boy Jim posted:There was a digipack edition of Citizen Kane without the big box junk. Yeah, but it was $27 compared to the $35-40 the boxset was.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 06:12 |
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Maxwell Lord posted:I've fiddled with it both ways but it never quite works- even before I had HD and Blu-Ray, movies on DVD that only had a 5.1 mix did tend to be a little "soft" in the action scenes. Nah, it's pretty loving annoying when you have to turn up the movie to hear the dialogue but any time there's music or sound effects it sounds like the tv is on nursing home volume. I think film makers have a tendency to mix sound effects and poo poo way too high because the primary consideration is the theatrical presentation. Contrary to what frumpsnake was saying I find 2.0 soundtracks (when available) to be much less harsh in this way.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 06:18 |
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Zat posted:Same here, and while I'm happy that I'm usually able to compensate for the issue on my PC (I watch my Blu-rays on it using PowerDVD, with a 2.0 speaker setup or headphones), I nonetheless miss the 2.0 track most(?) DVDs used to have. If they mix 5.1 correctly, it should condense nicely down into stereo, or even mono, without any significant issues. And since these guys know that their movie will be heard in stereo, they are going to make sure the surround mix works in stereo. Of course, I don't know why action scenes are so loud and dialog scenes are so quiet, but that's the way it goes. But can you say which movies are causing the problem?
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 13:55 |
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Cemetry Gator posted:But can you say which movies are causing the problem? Pretty much every movie I've ever watched made after like... 1980? in Blu-Ray has had this problem. The music/action/sound effects are insanely loud and people barely whisper. Sometimes I have to watch with subtitles on because the TV volume can be at 100 and they're still way too quiet to hear, but god help me if there's a single sound effect. So this setting you're talking about, where would it be on the PS3? Most of us use that, might be helpful to walk us through.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 15:44 |
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QVT posted:Pretty much every movie I've ever watched made after like... 1980? in Blu-Ray has had this problem. The music/action/sound effects are insanely loud and people barely whisper. Sometimes I have to watch with subtitles on because the TV volume can be at 100 and they're still way too quiet to hear, but god help me if there's a single sound effect. Then it's got to be you. I used to watch movies in stereo until last October, and I never really had that problem, especially if it is so widespread. Now, I looked on the PS3, and there doesn't appear to be a Dynamic Range Control in general (just for music playback). But that makes sense, since music is mastered at widely different volumes, and when playing between two different albums, you can have huge swings in volume. But in general, you either have a sound-system or a TV doing that, so it's one less piece in the puzzle. So you would have to check your TV. It could be the speakers, they might not be that good, so please let us know what kind of TV you are using. And you should check the settings. Maybe your TV has a really bad dynamic range limiter. It's tough with movies. They tend to have a wide dynamic range because it helps makes the action scenes much more interesting and attention grabbing. So you have quiet dialog, and then you have "BOOM BOOM BOOM" action scenes. In a theater, it works brilliantly. In a home environment, it can sometimes be difficult to get the right levels.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 17:46 |
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QVT posted:Pretty much every movie I've ever watched made after like... 1980? in Blu-Ray has had this problem. The music/action/sound effects are insanely loud and people barely whisper. Sometimes I have to watch with subtitles on because the TV volume can be at 100 and they're still way too quiet to hear, but god help me if there's a single sound effect. You should look into wireless headphones (along with the limiting settings everybody is talking about) When I watch a movie without them, I have to crank it to hear everything but if I have my headphones, I can watch it at a normal volume and not disturb anybody else. Just be aware at how loud you have them. A good rule of thumb is if you can hold them in front of your head and still hear everything, they're too loud. They also have the volume slider right on the side so it's easy to turn it up and down as needed.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 18:10 |
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On your PS3, go to the Settings tab. Then to Video Settings. Scroll down to "BD/DVD - Dynamic Range Control" and turn it ON. The next one down is "BD/DVD - Audio Output Format". Set that to Linear PCM.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 19:37 |
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You see, for me, the problem is the opposite. I rarely have trouble hearing dialogue, but big action sequences will be kinda quiet. Noticed it with the Star Wars blu-ray- it didn't quite sound right with either the default setting or the "movie" setting. Then again, that was on the TV- I haven't looked at the BR player's sound stuff.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 20:18 |
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Sporadic posted:You should look into wireless headphones (along with the limiting settings everybody is talking about) I have a pair of solid Sony headphones, and extra audio cable and little extenders. Will that cut down in quality of sound?
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 20:50 |
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Maxwell Lord posted:You see, for me, the problem is the opposite. I rarely have trouble hearing dialogue, but big action sequences will be kinda quiet. Noticed it with the Star Wars blu-ray- it didn't quite sound right with either the default setting or the "movie" setting. Then again, that was on the TV- I haven't looked at the BR player's sound stuff. Yeah, that's a compressor kicking in and over-compensating. Basically, that dynamic range stuff is acting sort of like an automatic volume knob that adjusts the output based on how loud the soundtrack is. When it is set too heavily, it will make things seem too quiet rather than in line with everything else.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 21:50 |
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Hibernator posted:On your PS3, go to the Settings tab. Then to Video Settings. Scroll down to "BD/DVD - Dynamic Range Control" and turn it ON. The next one down is "BD/DVD - Audio Output Format". Set that to Linear PCM. This helped a lot, thanks man. I would have never guessed there was a setting like that. It's never been a problem with movies on TV, just with things I'd played on the PS3. Guess now I know why.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 23:01 |
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Just scanned through the Lawrence Of Arabia restoration and it is a loving revelation compared to the old HDTV print. I'm convinced it will now be the go-to disc to show off the format. It's even more impressive than Sony's restoration of Taxi Driver. Just perfect in every way. It's getting a theatrical re-release on October 4th. My local theater is playing it and even at $12.50 a ticket, I'm still going to go. Seeing it on the big screen should be mindblowing. Red posted:I have a pair of solid Sony headphones, and extra audio cable and little extenders. Will that cut down in quality of sound? Can't imagine why it would. I have a headphones extender cord connected to the base of my wireless headphones stand (so I can get it away from my TV and cut down on interference) ----------- Adoration dropped down to $7.68 on Amazon. Never heard of it but it's a Sony Movie Classics release (which normally aren't that cheap) http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...ag=evdaisafi-20 Call Me Charlie fucked around with this message at 20:13 on Sep 5, 2012 |
# ? Sep 5, 2012 20:03 |
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Sporadic posted:Just scanned through the Lawrence Of Arabia restoration and it is a loving revelation compared to the old HDTV print. I'm convinced it will now be the go-to disc to show off the format. It's even more impressive than Sony's restoration of Taxi Driver. Just perfect in every way. Are there other (non-criterion) blu-rays like this? Where they have just an absolute wealth of special features and a great transfer? That Taxi Driver disc has so much stuff that it's worth owning even if you don't love the film.
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# ? Sep 5, 2012 21:15 |
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QVT posted:Are there other (non-criterion) blu-rays like this? Where they have just an absolute wealth of special features and a great transfer? That Taxi Driver disc has so much stuff that it's worth owning even if you don't love the film. The Adventures of Robin Hood, Psycho, The Conversation, Thr French Connection, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, The Searchers, and Forbidden Planet are all classics that got great releases with lots of extras. Those are just a few that jumped out at me from scanning my shelves, I know there are many others. Warner in particular has a good track record for giving their catalog titles good treatments.
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# ? Sep 5, 2012 23:53 |
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QVT posted:Are there other (non-criterion) blu-rays like this? Where they have just an absolute wealth of special features and a great transfer? That Taxi Driver disc has so much stuff that it's worth owning even if you don't love the film. Pulp Fiction received a pretty impressive release despite being a sub-$15 title. Great transfer, loseless soundtrack, two different documentaries, two critic roundtables, Tarantino's full appearance on the Charlie Rose show and some other interesting stuff (Tarantino getting interviewed by Michael Moore at the Independent Spirit Awards, deleted scenes, etc) -------- I don't have it but I heard Ben-Hur received a jam-packed release.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 00:18 |
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Daveski posted:The Adventures of Robin Hood, Psycho, The Conversation, Thr French Connection, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, The Searchers, and Forbidden Planet are all classics that got great releases with lots of extras. Those are just a few that jumped out at me from scanning my shelves, I know there are many others. Warner in particular has a good track record for giving their catalog titles good treatments. I'll add to that Goodfellas, A Clockwork Orange, Dr. Strangelove, Scarface, Raging Bull, The Shinning, The Audition, Unforgiven, Citizen Kane, and the upcoming They Live are amazing releases.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 00:55 |
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QVT posted:Are there other (non-criterion) blu-rays like this? Where they have just an absolute wealth of special features and a great transfer? That Taxi Driver disc has so much stuff that it's worth owning even if you don't love the film. It depends how you feel about the film, and I don't have any first-hand experience with it, but apparently the upcoming release of Titanic looks and sounds fantastic and has an insane amount of extras, including three commentaries, two documentaries, an hour of deleted scenes, 30+ short behind-the-scenes clips, and a boat-load of other stuff. I'm not a huge fan of the film myself, but I'm a sucker for extras so it looks pretty interesting.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 01:18 |
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PDMChubby posted:It depends how you feel about the film, and I don't have any first-hand experience with it, but apparently the upcoming release of Titanic looks and sounds fantastic and has an insane amount of extras, including three commentaries, two documentaries, an hour of deleted scenes, 30+ short behind-the-scenes clips, and a boat-load of other stuff. I'm not a huge fan of the film myself, but I'm a sucker for extras so it looks pretty interesting. All pun-noticing aside, only $23 for that much extra stuff -- on top of a fun movie -- seems like a good deal, although I'd expect it'll be down to, at most, $20 soon.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 01:25 |
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Sporadic posted:Pulp Fiction received a pretty impressive release despite being a sub-$15 title. It doesn't have what everyone who cares about special features wanted, a commentary with Tarantino, Jackson, Travolta and Thurman
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 03:55 |
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Skwirl posted:It doesn't have what everyone who cares about special features wanted, a commentary with Tarantino, Jackson, Travolta and Thurman I don't think Tarantino has ever done a commentary for one of his own movies.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 03:59 |
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Sporadic posted:I don't think Tarantino has ever done a commentary for one of his own movies. But he has done commentary for From Dusk Til Dawn and True Romance, both of which are extremely interesting! Also the first two Hostels and Hot Fuzz, but he didn't have anything to do with those movies so the commentary is less insightful.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 07:35 |
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scary ghost dog posted:But he has done commentary for From Dusk Til Dawn and True Romance, both of which are extremely interesting! Also the first two Hostels and Hot Fuzz, but he didn't have anything to do with those movies so the commentary is less insightful. The Hot Fuzz one is particularly bad, as it's just Quentin and Edgar Wright namedropping obscure 70s B movies and not really even talking about what's happening on screen. Totally skippable and the main reason I don't miss QT commentaries when they're absent from his films.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 07:54 |
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scary ghost dog posted:But he has done commentary for From Dusk Til Dawn and True Romance, both of which are extremely interesting! Also the first two Hostels and Hot Fuzz, but he didn't have anything to do with those movies so the commentary is less insightful. Huh. Is it too much to expect a possible commentary for Crimson Tide one day?
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 14:26 |
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Just quickly skimmed the initial posts here regarding the Hitchcock Masterpiece Collection and didn't see this listed. There's a UK 'mantlepiece' Limited Edition Set of this release that is 14 films, not 15 (North By Northwest is only in the US release). With the VAT dropping off it comes to $135 CAD including shipping - much cheaper than the US or Canadian release. I'm assuming these discs are going to be region-free but it hasn't been confirmed. What a beautiful release. friendo55 fucked around with this message at 18:15 on Sep 6, 2012 |
# ? Sep 6, 2012 17:01 |
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scary ghost dog posted:But he has done commentary for From Dusk Til Dawn and True Romance, both of which are extremely interesting! Also the first two Hostels and Hot Fuzz, but he didn't have anything to do with those movies so the commentary is less insightful. He also did a commentary for two episode of Spaced on the American DVD boxset but it has the same problem the Hot Fuzz one had. Colonel Whitey posted:The Hot Fuzz one is particularly bad, as it's just Quentin and Edgar Wright namedropping obscure 70s B movies and not really even talking about what's happening on screen. Totally skippable and the main reason I don't miss QT commentaries when they're absent from his films. I wish he would do more indepth interviews like he did on the Charlie Rose show. He's an interesting guy when he has somebody to keep him on track/challenge him.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 18:41 |
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friendo55 posted:Just quickly skimmed the initial posts here regarding the Hitchcock Masterpiece Collection and didn't see this listed. There's a UK 'mantlepiece' Limited Edition Set of this release that is 14 films, not 15 (North By Northwest is only in the US release). With the VAT dropping off it comes to $135 CAD including shipping - much cheaper than the US or Canadian release. Thanks for posting this. It looks cool, and it might be a really good buy for someone like me who already has the North by Northwest digibook.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 19:21 |
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friendo55 posted:Just quickly skimmed the initial posts here regarding the Hitchcock Masterpiece Collection and didn't see this listed. There's a UK 'mantlepiece' Limited Edition Set of this release that is 14 films, not 15 (North By Northwest is only in the US release). With the VAT dropping off it comes to $135 CAD including shipping - much cheaper than the US or Canadian release. Ordered this, they also have ... Friends The Complete Series for the same price.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 19:36 |
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friendo55 posted:Just quickly skimmed the initial posts here regarding the Hitchcock Masterpiece Collection and didn't see this listed. There's a UK 'mantlepiece' Limited Edition Set of this release that is 14 films, not 15 (North By Northwest is only in the US release). With the VAT dropping off it comes to $135 CAD including shipping - much cheaper than the US or Canadian release.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 21:50 |
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Sunset Boulevard is coming to blu ray: http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Sunset-Boulevard-Restored-Blu-Ray-Release-November-32586.html This looks phenomenal. Restored video and audio, and tons of extras: quote:•Commentary by Ed Sikov, author of On Sunset Blvd: The Life and Times of Billy Wilder Amazon.ca is showing this for under $20, so it's a must buy for me.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 03:06 |
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CopywrightMMXI posted:Sunset Boulevard is coming to blu ray: http://www.cinemablend.com/new/Sunset-Boulevard-Restored-Blu-Ray-Release-November-32586.html I knew it was coming to blu ray, but I had no idea it was going to be both restored and absolutely stuffed with extras. One of my favorite movies ever, and I can't believe we'll get to see a deleted scene from it.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 05:59 |
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QVT posted:Are there other (non-criterion) blu-rays like this? Where they have just an absolute wealth of special features and a great transfer? That Taxi Driver disc has so much stuff that it's worth owning even if you don't love the film. Nobody mentioned the Godfather Trilogy yet. The first two films (okay, the only films you are probably going to watch) look amazing. In fact, the scenes on the lake in the Godfarter part II are reference quality shots. They look amazing. And you get a whole disc dedicated to special features. Plus, there's nothing like watching this film in HD with a mono soundtrack.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 13:03 |
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Why a mono soundtrack?
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 13:37 |
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QVT posted:Are there other (non-criterion) blu-rays like this? Where they have just an absolute wealth of special features and a great transfer? That Taxi Driver disc has so much stuff that it's worth owning even if you don't love the film. The three-disc Avatar set is like this. I think that movie is a piece of poo poo but it looks unbelievable and the extras are incredible.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 14:00 |
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# ? May 10, 2024 00:51 |
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bowmore posted:Why a mono soundtrack? Because that's how the films were originally released. Stereo wasn't the standard yet.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 15:00 |