msycamore said:
I must admit I've never seen the 2004 DVD version more than once in its entirety but when I'm now going through it side-by-side with the real director's cut to make adjustments to the aspect ratio I'm amazed by the high level of differences in it, the amount of digital manipulation is insane, the Special Editions of the Star Wars trilogy don't even come close to the tinkering that's been done on this.
I'm still amused by the title "The George Lucas Director's Cut", should that title suggest someone else was the director of the film earlier but it's now George Lucas who is the director? I mean wouldn't calling it "Director's Cut" be enough. Either it is a director's cut or it's not, maybe Lucas are trying to tell us that the young director is now replaced by an older much different Lucas. The title is so stupid on so many levels I cannot find words for it. :)
Anyway, the amount of warping on the print used for the Laserdisc makes it next to impossible to overlay it and match the DVD transfer, in doing so, I resized the '04 DVD from 720x480 to 704x480 so that I could make adjustments more accurately but it will never be perfect, but it will be much more accurate than just a straight resize to 16:9.
I was shocked to hear about the DVD release back in '04, because I only was able to see the film staying up very late one night in the 90's to catch it on TCM. (On a weeknight before school, which took much arguing with parents to do) I bought the DVD and was surprised to see just how "clean" it looked. The white everywhere just seemed to be too white and stark and the changes were not subtle. Then I found the angrysun LD transfer and realized the extent of how much we were duped. It is much much much worse than the SE, because you don't realize how much has actually been changed. And the changes ruin the entire meaning of the film to boot. I watched the DVD once and have wanted to junk it ever since.
IDK what freaking print source they used for the LD, but you're quite right it is quite poor. You'd think it would be easy to pull a clean print as it's not like THX was ever a huge rental and they did make a director's cut with the few minutes put back in afterwards.
In any case, Techniscope does not look like the DVD. I've seen original Techniscope prints projected and they have a distinctive look to them that underlines the inherent grittiness in THX's world.
Freaking CGI monkeys. I'm surprised he didn't just "put the freaks up front".