My nieces will wonder why I'm so insistent on watching. "It's Star Trek, girls."Yeah, it's been a long time since TOS was on weekdays. I'll only be able to catch the last ten minutes or so, but still....
My nieces will wonder why I'm so insistent on watching. "It's Star Trek, girls."Yeah, it's been a long time since TOS was on weekdays. I'll only be able to catch the last ten minutes or so, but still....
Same here. I really dislike the idea of "remastering." It's at least as bad as colorizing, if not worse.I'm glad to see the show getting a little more love, but I wouldn't normally be able to catch it in that slot without recording, and there's no point since I have the DVDs (non-remastered, which I generally prefer).
Blame the people who chose to call these the "Remastered Edition(s)", which wasn't us.
Of course you can call them the remastered editions, since that's what they are, aside from the upgraded effects. Forget about the digital effects, look at the 90-plus percent of any episode that features live actors on sets, and compare them to earlier editions, and they look clearer, brighter, more vivid, and more detailed. That's remastering. It's the same thing that people have praised so much about the Batman '66 box set that just came out, how much higher the image quality is than in the syndicated versions that have been available to date, because they're remastered. The replaced effects in TOS are something that was done in addition to the remastering. That doesn't mean "remastering" can be used to mean "upgrading/replacing the special effects." If you go to get a haircut and decide you'll also get a manicure, that doesn't mean that from then on you can use the word "haircut" to mean "manicure." They're still two different things.What semantic hoops are we supposed to jump through if we want to discuss the remastered versions vs. the original versions in the context of their most obvious distinguishing feature, the different VFX?
If TPTB hadn't put out "special editions" under the term "remastered", you wouldn't have to spend several paragraphs explaining the difference when the subject of preferring the non-remastered versions comes up.
Just say "replaced special effects" or something along those lines. It's as simple as that. Call it what we called it when George Lucas did it with the Star Wars prequels, before this whole confusion over the word "remastering" happened. Call it upgrading or alteration or replacement. Remastering means creating the purest version possible from the original, unaltered and undegraded source. So remastering and modifying/replacing are opposites, not synonyms.I still don't think you answered my question, so let me rephrase it: How could we have worded our posts such that you wouldn't have posted paragraphs correcting us for misusing the term "remastered"?
DC really has shown love for the gorillas over the years, hasn't it? I remember I bought a Superman comic when I was a kid just because the cover had a giant gorilla that shot kryptonite beams out of its eyes lol.
Well, if perpetuating a stereotype is "love."
It still seems like your ultimate beef should be with how the product was named, not with us for distinguishing between that product and its processor by using the distinguishing word in the newer product's name. Everyone involved in this exchange evidently understood what aspect of the newer product we disagreed with.Just say "replaced special effects" or something along those lines. It's as simple as that. Call it what we called it when George Lucas did it with the Star Wars prequels, before this whole confusion over the word "remastering" happened. Call it upgrading or alteration or replacement. Remastering means creating the purest version possible from the original, unaltered and undegraded source. So remastering and modifying/replacing are opposites, not synonyms.
The Classic TV channel MeTV has a line-up of Superhero and sci-fi shows that they show every Saturday evening. They include:
The Adventures of Superman (50's George Reeve series)
Batman (60's Adam West series)
Wonder Woman (70's Linda Carter series)
Star Trek TOS (Remastered)
Svengoolie (movies)
Lost in Space
The only things on there I haven't watched are TOS, since I watch it without commercials on Netflix, and Svengoolie.
I've tried a few episodes of LiS, but that is just to cheesy for me.
I have really enjoyed the three DC show though.
Anyone else watching this stuff?
Yeah, that about sums it up without wasting umpteen redundant posts.RJDiogenes put the term in quotes, I think we all understood what was being implied by that.
I love Svengoolie. The tradition of the Horror Host is classic Americana and must be preserved.![]()
It still seems like your ultimate beef should be with how the product was named, not with us for distinguishing between that product and its processor by using the distinguishing word in the newer product's name.
I love Svengoolie. The tradition of the Horror Host is classic Americana and must be preserved.![]()
I couldn't agree more. As a matter of fact I was thinking the other day about how I wish that MeTV would keep the tradition alive should something further happens with Rich Koz's health (he's had two heart attacks, the most recent in 2012). The no-brainer plan would be to bring in Elvira and ressurect (yet again) her show as a replacement. I'm not trying to write the guy off and certainly don't want anything to happen to Rich, I just want the tradition to keep going well into the future.
Most likely a reference to this, which would have been a hot topic in Hollywood at the time.Although I wonder what that "run for governor" gag at the end was about.
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