Don't think it needed the flashbacks to earlier in the episode.
Those were very annoying.
Don't think it needed the flashbacks to earlier in the episode.
Exactly. And it's not 75 minutes because it's all they can afford. They're added new music, new effects and new scenes to create a different experience.
I watched this new version on iPlayer. I found the editing clumsily done with several key points removed (as others have mentioned), the inclusion of which would not have extended the runtime significantly. It's a worthwhile experiment, albeit not very well executed. I won't be buying the Blu-ray.
the original music is there, but Mark Ayres added some. A very comic piece which doesn't work well in particular.How is there new music? Your subsequent post implies that they don't have separate dialogue and music tracks they can isolate. So is it just in addition to the old music, filling in parts that didn't have music originally?
BritBox is the main streaming service for Classic Who, An Adventure in Space & Time and some of the other anniversary specials, so if it's going pop up on any of the streaming services it'll probably be there. They also have at least some of Classic Who, including the animated recreations, which are not on BritBox, on Tubi, so it could also show up there.I was thinking more in terms of streaming, ideally on Disney+ or something I already have access to. If I were going to spend money on The Daleks, I'd want it to be the complete, original version. Frankly I find the idea of colorizing it and cutting it down to cater to modern tastes rather crass, but I'm curious enough to want to see the result just once.
Already being discussed in its own thread.The War Games will also be getting this treatment.
"Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should."What is it with colorizing old classics, these days?
What is it with colorizing old classics, these days?
I long for the day when everything is in colour. So long as the monochrome originals are available to satisfy the purists.What is it with colorizing old classics, these days?
As I already stated: The idea of "Space Patrol Orion" in colour is interesting, yes - but I highly doubt, that it would look good.I long for the day when everything is in colour. So long as the monochrome originals are available to satisfy the purists.
Not just "these days" -- it's been going on since colorization was introduced. Media mogul Ted Turner made a big push in the mid-1980s for colorizing old B&W shows and movies to make them "accessible" to narrow-minded audiences, though he backed down from some of it in response to criticism. But his cable channels like TBS and TNT showed colorized versions of B&W shows, which looked strange because it was just blocks of color superimposed on grayscale, giving fabrics a kind of metallic sheen. The idea was that you could turn down the color knob on your TV if you wanted (since TVs were still mostly analog) and it would look black-and-white, but the lack of color-graded shadows (if that's the term) made the color version look unreal.
I wonder if they cleaned up some of the colorized Gilligan's Island when they upgraded the picture quality. While there is still a little off, and there is purple skies, the versions they show now doesn't seem to be quite as extreme as what you describe. I kind of like how things have worked out with Gilligan's Island, MeTV and Sundance Channel both show it, and MeTV shows the colorized version, while Sundance shows the black and white version, so you can have can pick which you'd rather watch.
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