2020-10-01, 01:20 AM
(This post was last modified: 2020-11-12, 12:15 PM by LucasGodzilla.)
Since Big Trouble In Little China is nearly finished (waiting on a couple last things before I can release a proper MKV), I thought I'd start talking about the next preservation on my roadmap. A movie that got me started into fan restoration work in the first place.
Here's the nutshell. One day, I stumbled randomly across a post on the Blu-Ray forum about how the Hellraiser 2K restoration put out by Arrow looked practically nothing like its 35mm counterpart.
This led me down a sort of train of hobby work for a here on FanRes where I tried to regrade with Arrow BD with those five 35mm stills above as well as a gallery of other stills provided from the same guy below.
The results were mixed admittedly. Although I did come out with a release of the regrade, I was never truly happy with the results for a variety of reasons.
The first big reason was that I was brand new to the community and I was still trying to figure out how to approach this project. The long story short in that regard was @TomArrow being basically my mentor as he watched me continually struggle trying to piece together basic stuff (though I am very thankful that he was a very patient person and stuck around). Since then though, I've learned some newer techniques and stuff that'd helped me a lot back then.
The second biggest reason was that there was a lot of educated guessing involved which I didn't like to do since I had no idea how the colors were supposed to be handled for scenes outside of those stills and I couldn't tell what was fading or photochemical color grading more often than not. Although there is a laserdisc that does respect the 35mm color grading, I have no means of ripping it even if I could get my hands on it.
On top of all that, there was still the weirdly harsh grain issue in the BD that I had no way of really fixing easily without accidentally DNRing detail. At the end of the day, it was a bit of a mess that I hoped to revisit someday.
Fast forward a few years later when I stumbled onto some celluloid-pertinent opportunities, I noticed that this movie was on the books too, with a low-fade high-quality print.
I'll be taking it from the top for those who are unfamiliar with the regrade I attempted.
Here's the nutshell. One day, I stumbled randomly across a post on the Blu-Ray forum about how the Hellraiser 2K restoration put out by Arrow looked practically nothing like its 35mm counterpart.
JohnCarpenterFan;15869547 Wrote:It is very interesting that you brought up Hellraiser.And having seen his and his screencaps, I can never unsee just how horrid the Arrow master really is in comparison. All of the stylish blue flair and whatnot is just dull, neutral, and lifeless! It's very much akin to how Fox treated BTiLC.
Regarding Zombie, finally got to sit down and watch the 4K restoration in full. This is an incredible disc, the colors are absolutely gorgeous, don't see why anybody would have a problem with them unless they've subscribed to that silly notion described above.
Blue Underground pulled off an incredible accomplishment releasing this and Maniac back-to-back. Almost seems like they're saying to the other labels "Just you try and beat this, I dare you." Very excited to see their future 4K remasters which I hear will include The New York Ripper and Dead and Buried.
Edit:
Should also note that the extra information on the top and bottom of those scans isn't part of the intended composition and was matted during projection. There is some information on the left or right (depends on which image) that was on the print that I didn't manage to capture due to equipment used and lack of time.
This led me down a sort of train of hobby work for a here on FanRes where I tried to regrade with Arrow BD with those five 35mm stills above as well as a gallery of other stills provided from the same guy below.
The results were mixed admittedly. Although I did come out with a release of the regrade, I was never truly happy with the results for a variety of reasons.
The first big reason was that I was brand new to the community and I was still trying to figure out how to approach this project. The long story short in that regard was @TomArrow being basically my mentor as he watched me continually struggle trying to piece together basic stuff (though I am very thankful that he was a very patient person and stuck around). Since then though, I've learned some newer techniques and stuff that'd helped me a lot back then.
The second biggest reason was that there was a lot of educated guessing involved which I didn't like to do since I had no idea how the colors were supposed to be handled for scenes outside of those stills and I couldn't tell what was fading or photochemical color grading more often than not. Although there is a laserdisc that does respect the 35mm color grading, I have no means of ripping it even if I could get my hands on it.
On top of all that, there was still the weirdly harsh grain issue in the BD that I had no way of really fixing easily without accidentally DNRing detail. At the end of the day, it was a bit of a mess that I hoped to revisit someday.
Fast forward a few years later when I stumbled onto some celluloid-pertinent opportunities, I noticed that this movie was on the books too, with a low-fade high-quality print.
A perfect opportunity to finally be able to see how the whole movie looked in 35mm for the first time and in 4K no less!
Calculations had roughly estimated the project costs to be $1000 to cover rental, shipping, scanning and a hard drive.
As usual, I'll start with pledges, though I'll make a PayPal Pool if it looks like we can overcome the initial cost hurdle.