That doesn't matter. It's how it DID look.
Look, I don't care if a director wants to change his film to make it exactly how he wants. But he needs to also recognize the need for preservation of the original iteration.
I've said it before and I'll say it again, the 5-disc "Blade Runner" Blu-Ray is the perfect example - there's the director-intended version, with all the color-correction and grain removal and SFX fixes Scott wanted, presented alongside perfect restorations of the original versions (all 3, as a matter of fact) with everything that was originally there intact.
But we're not talking about what a director wants - we're talking about preserving the theatrical experience in the home, and that's something Blu-Ray can come damn close to replicating. But that means preserving the grain along with everything else that was there originally. Otherwise, you're losing detail and information that should be there at the expense of making something look "newer," which is NOT good, no matter how you try to spin it.