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EyeShotFirst

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Join date
19-Jan-2009
Last activity
16-May-2025
Posts
3,124

Post History

Post
#754448
Topic
Last movie seen
Time

DuracellEnergizer said:


Dial M for Murder (1954)

Bland direction, no likable characters, and all that convoluted nonsense with the keys near the end make this one of the most overrated movies I've ever seen. Ray Milland's performance is the only real saving grace this picture has.

I'm positive that were it not for Hitchcock's name, this movie would've been forgotten decades ago.

C-

 I agree completely. I was going on a Hitchcock binge recently and Dial M for Murder was the only film I just couldn't get into. I just don't thing it grabs the audience like Hitchcock films do. Why is this considered one of his masterpieces, and Marnie considered a crapsterpiece?

Post
#754205
Topic
The best classic rock album of all time.
Time

My appreciation for the Doors stems from the fact that while they were "trippy", they put out some really good music, and showed great musicianship. Each member was extremely talented and good at their craft. Even when they'd play some very trippy stuff, and Jim Morrison would be extremely wasted, they still sounded great. Jim is one of the few singers who could make drunk gibberish sound good.

Yeah, they are a little pretentious, but what 60s group wasn't pretentious?

Robby Krieger, Ray Manzarek, and John Densmore are musicians that people tend to overlook. Jim didn't want to be the focus of the group, but the singer always gets the attention. 

Post
#754030
Topic
Last movie seen
Time

The Homesman (2014)

I'm a pretty big fan of Tommy Lee Jones as an actor, and recently as a director. His film Three Burials for Melquiades Estrada was a wonderful film. It reminded me of some of Peckinpah's better work, but that's another discussion entirely.

The Homesman is his latest film, and looking at the poster, it appears to be a Western, but isn't your father's Western. The only thing you could consider Western, is the setting and attire. This film is a brutal look at life during westward expansion. Instead of the warm colors of John Ford's films, we are given a cold, harsh reality.

It's not the easiest film to watch, but it's definitely a good film. This doesn't paint the romantic view of the west that is in so many films. It is also not playing for the Academy by giving you a "Sad for the sake of being sad" experience that so many of our wonderful Oscar winning pictures have.

I'm not going to say what all it's about, but I will say, I have been thinking about it, ever since I watched it 2 days ago, and that's saying something for a newer film.

I highly recommend this film, but watch it by yourself the first time you see it.

Post
#753850
Topic
HI-Res Poster Art
Time

There is an increased interest in the Definitive Collection artwork. Several years back, I made an updated collage, but my skills have since improved tremendously, so I decided to re-tackle it with better resources. This is basically available to any of you guys who want to make your own Definitive box.

http://stephenreams.deviantart.com/art/Star-Wars-Trilogy-Poster-515106803

I chose DeviantART, because they don't seem to compress like imageshack, and photobucket is getting to ridiculous to use these days.

Post
#753561
Topic
Star Wars DVD Covers
Time

Received another awesome email today, this one from Jetrell Fo

I believe this is my first big set of DVD covers, back in my hands. The set comes with the Box, Covers, Template, and instructions.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/w5dzyieyx2iwfo7/EyeShotFirst%282%29.rar?dl=0

Any issues with that, just tell me, and I'll sort them out. These, like my blu ray set, are being sent to basically anything I own with a hard drive of some sort.

Post
#753560
Topic
Blu-Ray and other HD box size STAR WARS covers
Time

The problem with my instructions is the fact that I never made the box. But here is my template, as well as instructions on how to make it.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/pqert69725pqp2l/Box%20Template.png?dl=0

https://www.dropbox.com/s/7w3wnm8sjs1p61i/READ%20ME.txt?dl=0

And for archival purposes

                                                                 READ ME

READ THIS BEFORE YOU EVEN START

Well, if you have made it this far, I must start by saying thank you!!!. Now let us cut to the chase.
You absolutely need to print out the template, unless you are a genius.

For the template, I recommend a nice strong card stock paper. It will make the box stronger.

For the actual part of the box with the pretty stars and vader, use what you want, but a nice shiny paper would be best. Some have talked about printing on a foil for nice effect



The area that says DO NOT CUT, keep those words in mind. No part of that should be cut.

Cut the area that says "cut across this dotted line" on the Mid Flaps, but do NOT get near the middle part of the box.

Now fold the TOP were it says Bottom Flap, Mid Flap, and Top flap. Make sure it is a perfect fold, do not go past where
it says do not cut.

Do the same for the BOTTOM

NOW, fold the lines from the top Mid Flap, to the bottom Mid Flap even going across the Do Not Cut part.

Put a dab of glue on top of the BOTTOM FLAP
Press the MID FLAP on top of the Bottom Flap.
Put a dab of glue on top of the MID FLAP
Put a dab of glue on the exposed part of the BOTTOM FLAP
Press the TOP FLAP on top of ALL FLAPS.

DO THE SAME FOR BOTH SIDES.

Does it look like a box yet?  DO THE SAME FOR THE COVER, THAT YOU DID WITH
THE TEMPLATE!!!!!



FOR A NICE SEAMLESS COVER

Print out the cover on a thick gloss, or card stock. Then print the template on the back.

Post
#753518
Topic
Blu-Ray and other HD box size STAR WARS covers
Time

Jonno was kind enough to email me my blu ray set, box, disc, and everything else exactly as I had finished it. I have put it in several places to ensure I won't lose it again.

Those who want them, follow this link:

https://www.dropbox.com/s/safche2r2d7sl8p/Star%20Wars%20Despecialized.rar?dl=0

I'm feeling a little Lucasy and debating on making some slight corrections, mostly to little mistakes I can see on my better monitor. The Empire poster, I can see a little bit of Yoda's ear from my overlays, and some artifacts. I have some higher quality scans, the coloration will mostly be the same. I also see some places where the blacks weren't as low as they needed to be. 

Post
#753442
Topic
Random Thoughts
Time

It doesn't help that Paul was singing a song that was rougher on his voice as a younger man. Maybe if he'd sung Blackbird or Mull of Kintyre, it wouldn't have been so shaky. I think it had a lot to do with the fact that he only performed one song, I'm not a professional singer by any means, but I gotta sing about 10 minutes ahead of time, or I sound pretty bad. It's the same with guitar. You gotta get the blood flowing and the muscles warmed up.

Bob on the other hand, hasn't sounded "good" in years. Many argue that he never did, but I think his vocal chops were pretty solid in the late 60's to up around the 80's. He started doing that weird raspy blues thing in the 90's. His latest album has touches of the younger Bob Dylan, but for the most part, it's kind of too late. I hear from a lot of folks that he doesn't care anymore, but I think if that was the case, he wouldn't even perform. 

Post
#753397
Topic
Blu-Ray and other HD box size STAR WARS covers
Time

I'd like copies of all my works. The hours I put into those, back when I had all kinds of time on my hands. People have popped up with some of them, but they've been changed up. I want the ones I initially released.

My first DVD set

My second DVD set

And my Blu Ray set, which is probably the most work I put into a set. I had the discs, the box, and I did a lot of work on getting the posters just right.

Post
#753262
Topic
The best classic rock album of all time.
Time

Possessed said:

The part about guitars is definitely true as well.  Even Eric Clapton has said that the expensive guitars are only more expensive to maintain but aren't better guitars.

Here's a picture of Stevie Ray Vaughan with his famous, and most favorite "Number 1" guitar:

I would dare to say that this is not a thousand dollar guitar made from the finest parts.  :) (In fact, he found it in a pawn shop for cheap before he got famous because it was all he could afford).  But listen to him play it and it sounds amazing, just because of the hands it is in.

Of course it's worth  hundreds of thousands now, but that's only because it was his guitar.

Definitely true!

Eddie Van Halen's guitar was built using parts that were heading to the junk pile.

I had a strat copy when I was in my teens that I still play to this day, though heavily modified. I thought it had an amazing sound, and people always bragged about it. When I was about 16 or so, I decided I'd take the paint off and give it a nice dark stained finish. Got to the wood, and found out it was cheap plywood. It's got Fender electronics, but the wood is all cheap stuff.

People forget that many guitarists' first albums feature cheap pawn shop instruments through no-name brand amps.

The only thing I recommend people paying a little more for, are acoustic guitars, because a crappy acoustic is less forgiving than an electric.

Post
#753229
Topic
The best classic rock album of all time.
Time

hairy_hen said:

These kinds of differences are due almost entirely to the quality of the masters used, and the different techniques used in mixing the albums.  There is nothing wrong with the CD format in and of itself, and there is no reason why a CD copy from an identical master should not outperform a vinyl version.

The fact that it often does not is a reflection on how badly the format tends to be abused by so-called engineers or producers who do not understand how to properly use equalization or compression.  It does not mean that CD sound is inherently bad, or that vinyl is automatically better simply by being vinyl.  The superior quality or 'life' is usually due to the fact that it was a good recording that was allowed to pass through to the end medium without being screwed up somewhere along the way.  Frequently CD versions do get screwed up by being made to appeal to the lowest common denominator (ie, forced to be crazy loud), and the sound quality suffers for it.  But CD's that are mixed and mastered well can sound every bit as good as vinyl, and quite possibly better depending on the source and the equipment used.

Older CD's cannot be used as an accurate measure of the format's quality, because early analog-to-digital converters were crap and put a lot of distortion into the sound.  With newer converters this is no longer a significant issue.

The sample rate doesn't have a whole lot to do with it, because the Nyquist theorem clearly shows that all audible detail within the range of human hearing can be represented within the CD bandwidth.  Top-notch conversion is needed to ensure there are no artifacts, which is why higher sample rates can sometimes be beneficial (lesser converters have an easier time with them), but the main reason to record at a high sample rate is to capture ultrasonic frequencies, which are usually low-pass filtered out of vinyl anyway.

I'm not attacking vinyl as a medium; I grew up with it, and have a lot of appreciation for it.  But some of the mythical properties attributed to it don't have a whole lot of basis in fact, and I am interested in understanding why things actually sound the way they do.  Without making direct, level-matched comparisons of the same recording from the same master on different end mediums, general statements about which is better don't actually mean a whole lot.

Absolutely!. Take a Telarc classical recording on CD, or even better SACD, and tell me it doesn't sound like you are right there in the concert hall. 

I have a pretty large vinyl collection, as well as a CD collection. Many records I have on CD, I have on vinyl as well. My appreciation from vinyl came for my love of Big Band music. You'd have a hard time finding a cd version that sounds better than an early vinyl release, because the cd version usually a vinyl rip. Then when they started using magnetic tape to record around the early 50's, that's when I say, get the CD version of that record.

It's like people that buy these Gibson Les Paul's or SGs and because the guitar is made out of the most expensive wood, it will sound better than an identical model made out of a cheap wood. Same pickups, hardware,  wiring, pots, and amp. The companies have been saying that for years to the point where people actually believe it now.

If vinyl was the better medium, the big classical companies would be jumping on the bandwagon with all the hipster labels.

Sometimes, I listen to MP3, because an album that Rick Rubin helmed, isn't gonna sound better on any format.

I think both formats have their charm, but I will always pick digital for classical, unless it's that early digital, where the cellos sound rubbery.

Post
#753092
Topic
Last song you listened to.
Time

Astronomy Domine - Pink Floyd

Easily the best of the Syd Barret era. You can hear touches of what you would hear later on, and the portions of the song sound very similar to the later recorded "Shine on You Crazy Diamond", but I think that was intentional. Of course a song about Syd would borrow harmonic structures from a song Syd was integral part of.

I understand fully why it was the only Syd Barret song to stay in the Pink Floyd repertoire to the end, and David Gilmour still performs it at solo performances.

Post
#753032
Topic
Return of the Jedi Appreciation Thread
Time

Mark Hamill was doing a lot of stage work after Empire, during Jedi, and a few years after that. He felt more at home in Broadway than in Hollywood. He was Mozart in Amadeus on Broadway, and was also considered for the part in the film, but a studio executive turned him down because he didn't want Luke Skywalker to be in the movie.

In film, he was trying to get more parts that were different from Luke Skywalker. He probably got offered hundreds of shitty sci fi film roles in attempts to cash in on his name. He did voice work as early as the 70's, so his transition from stage to The Joker was an easy one. I'd say he's had the career he wanted.