Please keep them at 4x3.both shows could probably have beautiful 16:9 HD presentations.
I only say that because Jonathan West said that they were filmed widescreen safe, so a 16:9 presentation should be possible without cropping.Please keep them at 4x3.
They would have no choice. But even holding the BDs back half a year would seem cynical, from the standpoint of people who have actually towed the line on physical media (and I certainly have, when it comes to ST). These aren't new shows.They would come to blu ray eventually if they were to do this. Shows like Discovery and Lower Decks have done so
So, I usually forget to bring this up whenever I'm in "consumers already had a chance to vote with their wallets" mode. But what about a half-and-half measure. Go upscale on all the special effects and and composite shots, but do full HD restoration for everything that's actually on film and doesn't require compositing. Means spending months/years finding everything, and eventually doing upscale on anything they can't find (a la TNG).I think DS9 and VOY will get remastered eventually, but it'll be a cheap AI upscale rather than a proper remaster from the negs. Which is a real shame, because both shows could probably have beautiful 16:9 HD presentations.
I only say that because Jonathan West said that they were filmed widescreen safe, so a 16:9 presentation should be possible without cropping.
They may have filmed live action footage to protect for widescreen, but that might not be the case with the model photography from the first half of the series.I only say that because Jonathan West said that they were filmed widescreen safe, so a 16:9 presentation should be possible without cropping.
So, I usually forget to bring this up whenever I'm in "consumers already had a chance to vote with their wallets" mode. But what about a half-and-half measure. Go upscale on all the special effects and and composite shots, but do full HD restoration for everything that's actually on film and doesn't require compositing. Means spending months/years finding everything, and eventually doing upscale on anything they can't find (a la TNG).
Where would that fall on the 1-10 scale of difficulty. Would it be like a 5, or more of a 7-8. 10 is the full TNG treatment (it's not going to happen again); 12-13 would be DS9/VOY getting the full TNG treatment (almost definitely never going to happen).
I'm fuzzy on this. Even when they showed TNG with set lights just outside the (usable) frame, I never understood how there was more than just the finished 4x3 picture.
Film was natively 4x3 (even if not the exact aspect ratio of television). If you wanted widescreen you shot in either scope or Super 35. Or just didn't use the whole frame (trimmed it down to a 1.85).
When they shot ENT in Super 35 (before switching to digital) it was a huge deal. Rick Berman patted himself on the back for it in press releases. It's hard to imagine all the TNG~VOY stuff was Super 35. VOY in particular looks very flat and 4x3 (it's the most Berman Trek of the Berman Treks).
Joss Whedon shot Angel/Buffy in a 16x9-compatible format (I assume Super 35), but didn't protect for it. This is of course after they stopped shooting 16mm. By most accounts, those shows are supposed to be 4x3.
But I can't imagine DS9/VOY getting any special consideration during photography that TNG did not.
But all the filmed effects would be recomposited anyway, and the CGI would be re-rendered or remade where appropriate. This wouldn't be a major blocker.They may have filmed live action footage to protect for widescreen, but that might not be the case with the model photography from the first half of the series.
Looks like the team handling the restoration work on the theatrical version of TMP that will be on the 4K UHD set decided to do their own 'fixes' to the film.
Can you go into CIA headquarters or FBI and they have their logo on the ground that everybody walks on?
Bill Hunt says the drydock shot is as per the theatrical release, which is interesting.
So will they re fix or unfix the fixes that have been done to the theatrical version?And the team working on the 4K DE is <i>not</i> the same as the group who worked on the theatrical 4K.
I just came back from a small conversation with Bill Hunt from the Digital Bits and he says that the shot of Enterprise leaving Drydock is actually from the genuine 'theatrical version' rather than being a modern fix.
So will they re fix or unfix the fixes that have been done to the theatrical version?
I was kind of hoping and expecting that they would be handed a pristine fairly perfect version of the theatrical cut and then they would only have to work on the parts that were changed for the DE.
I have a cynical feeling not enough people buy the other 4k movies, and TMP director's cut remains a streaming-only release.
I only say that because Jonathan West said that they were filmed widescreen safe, so a 16:9 presentation should be possible without cropping.
Are you sure though? It looks soft in a way it wouldn't if you were attempting to fix the shot digitally in 2021, but almost certainly would if you were in a rush to do it optically in 1979.Except it's not that way in the original theatrical, AFAIK.
While watching Star Trek IV I noticed this shot.Yeah that original logo was an idiot shot. Random shot of the logo on the floor. Is that something that's done? Can you go into CIA headquarters or FBI and they have their logo on the ground that everybody walks on?
I'm not going back to their streaming service just to watch Berman Trek in HD.
I preordered/bought all the TNG-R BD sets as they were coming out, not just the seasons but also the specials. While it seemed the majority of fans vocal on the subject were "Meh, I don't want to buy TNG again... meh, I'll wait for the complete collection boxset... meh, I'll stream it... meh, I'll wait for the DS9 remaster... meh, meh, meh... I said 'meh' already!"Oh well, I guess I'll just give up expressing my demand for a remaster of DS9/VOY since YOU have no interest.
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