PDB said:
_,,,^..^,,,_ said:
PDB said:
It is similar but clearly the widescreen LD was re-mixed to be a bit more aggressive. I have it if you want it, just drop me a line.
Thanks for the offer - just please wait until the things will be more clear... if you can provide also video along with audio, it will be great, as it's easyer to sync. What about the other two movies, have you them, and do they sounds different from their widescreen counterparts too? And, right because we are here, what about P&S colors Vs LB colors?
I have this LD for temple:
http://www.lddb.com/laserdisc/11028/LV-1643/Indiana-Jones-and-the-Temple-of-Doom-(1984)
and similar to Raiders the mix isn't as aggressive. Same sounds just mixed very slightly different
only this is PCM unlike Raiders' analog. It leads me to believe that the widescreen Indy LDs are remixed.
Having said that, Temple of Doom's widescreen Dolby Surround Stereo soundtrack is perhaps one
of the best mixes I have ever heard regardless of it not being discreet. Hell unlike the DVD or Blu
mix it has the original dialog panning. The widescreen LD of Raiders and Crusade are pretty good too.
Been awhile since I watched them to see if there are color changes but I can check the p&s of both to see.
Many said the Raiders WS LD audio was remixed and therefore not a good source. After watching the whole trilogy on LD myself, I really beg to differ. All three maintain the original dialogue and effects panning that is gone on DVD/BD, and to be honest are the best I've heard the films sound.
If the older analog only P&S discs have a different mix, that would be interesting as we've already wondered if Raiders was remixed for WS LD and had the original Dolby Stereo 35mm version on the earlier disc. The difference is that the film was mixed for VistaSonic only to have to switch over and tweak for a Dolby Stereo release at the very last minute. I'm wondering if they actually used these slightly different mixes instead of remastering audio.
Temple has audio so good, it's in my top 10 home audio tracks and I really don't see how a discrete 70mm version could improve upon it--it's that aggressive. Last Crusade sounds great and over on the lddb forums, some have commented that it played better in the Dolby Stereo matrix in 35mm versus the discrete 70mm version.
Video-wise, Raiders has some aliasing issues but in all looks like a more natural version of the 2003 DVD. Temple is reference quality, and Last Crusade is an older master that looks like the VHS.
I'm liking the Wowow transfers more and more. Despite not being directly 4K they have more detail in places than the BD version and reflect all previous color timing.