logo Sign In

Mr. Zilla

User Group
Members
Join date
15-May-2024
Last activity
10-Aug-2025
Posts
4

Post History

Post
#1657473
Topic
Info: Recommended Editions of Disney Animated (and Partially Animated) Features
Time

Doctor M said:

As of yet, I don’t think any new releases are improvements outside of the 4k versions of Snow White and Cinderella.

I don’t believe any other ink and paint animation have had new transfers. Pre-4k CG is just upscaled maybe with some HDR color improvements. Anything recent has a 4k source, so I don’t believe any are badly messed up (except maybe Incredibles 2, but that’s Pixar).
I’ve yet to find any reason to make an update to the first posts.

I’m open to suggestions though.

I think every movie listed has at least one blu-ray now, while the original post says some are only up to DVD.

But if that’s not enough to warrant going back to update, I understand.

Post
#1656853
Topic
Info: Recommended Editions of Disney Animated (and Partially Animated) Features
Time

Untitled Junk said:

The recent 4K Ultra HD remasters for Blue Sky’s Ice Age 1-4 and the first Rio movie are currently on Disney+ in most territories, and apparently, the color grading for all of them have been significantly altered to be not just brighter and vibrant than the older home media releases, but also being more accurate to both the promotional stills and original Blue Sky render files. The old HD masters used on DVD, Blu-Ray and certain TV airings looked grey, very muddy and desaturated, when compared to the color grading for WDAS and Pixar’s CG animated films from that same period.

For some reason, the 4K UHD remaster of Ice Age (2002) on Disney+ has removed two dissolve transitions in some sequences. At around 14:38, when Scrat gets struck by lightning in the rain, the film then cuts to the human hut attack sequence instead of doing a second-long dissolve transition to it, as seen on older home media releases. At 44:08, the dissolve transition from that small icicle sealing the glacier shut to the camera panning down to the main characters walking has also been replaced with a cut. Thankfully, none of the other Blue Sky films in 4K UHD (so far) have been affected by those minor oddities.

I hope we get a 4K remaster of Robots (2005) someday. Because, the color grading for it on all home media releases have this hideous brownish-grey tint, which ruins the intended bright, vibrant and natural look it originally had in the 35mm theatrical prints, as well as in the FMVs for the video game tie-in, and I would love to see that look be restored to its proper glory.

This person did color correction of the blu-ray.
https://originaltrilogy.com/user/thephantomaton/id/73410