Verb, would you say DVDs are in anyway superior to Bluray or HDDVD? Just curious, no ulterior motive in this question.
and some movies were filmed with DVD-quality formats in mind. If you watch something like Pearl Harbor on Blu-ray, it's gonna look like dogshit, because the film wasn't made when that technology was available.
What about movies like Alien where the remaster process makes the BD superior to the original DVD format?
Quote from: challengerX on March 27, 2017, 10:00:42 PMCome on birbYou called?
Come on birb
Superior in what way?
Resolution, makes the film look more crisp which makes darker scenes keep their tone while making out what wasn't there before. The Space Jockey being seated in his seat near the beginning of the film was apparent but the higher resolution makes the burst chest on him more apparent (something that was important to note).
I haven't seen Alien, but is it inconceivable that someone may have a reason to prefer the original?
Um....that goes into territory of cut footage instead of one on video quality. The original theatrical release had cut footage, there's a director's cut that has all footage intended for the film. However even the cut footage not shown is considered canonical so there's no controversy over "which cut is superior". Most people simply watch the original theatrical cut, but in terms of quality, there's nothing that would make the film better in lower resolution; most of the technological achievements of the film were of practical on set props and improvisations instead of special effects.
I tend to prefer film grain and other imperfections because it takes me back to the time period.