• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Any films where you'd rather have the DVD then Blue-Ray?

I'm very sorry, but your analogy with reference to CD is flawed scientifically, and has been disproved: The 10 Biggest Lies In Audio
That article proves exactly nothing. Its "science" is shoddy and dubious at best. And number ten is such an utterly ridiculous position to take that it completely negates the rest of the article. People hear better than other people, and thus they have a better aural acuity than others.

As far as analog is better, you can through any skewed "fact" or science at the issue as you want, that doesn't make it true.

For one thing, the article assumes vinyl is the preferable medium for analog output. It isn't, and it never was.

But even beyond that, the reason fundamental reason analog is better is because sound is analog. The notes an instrument produces are analog and what the ear interrupts is analog. So any digital representation must be converted twice.

This is why studios have really expensive conversion equipment plugged into the sound boards and why audiophiles spend $1000s on DACs. Admittedly, the technology has come a long way in the last few years, and the cheaper ones are way better than they used to be, but that doesn't change the fact that I would have much rather spent the money on the one I bought on better speakers--or even I high-end pair of cans. But I digress...

The point is, no matter how high the sample-rate might be, in the end, a digital copy is still an incomplete reproduction.

People can argue all they want to about how those bits and pieces are inaudible--and they are--but that doesn't negate their importance. They're what add the nuance to the sound--that "warm" feeling. People can't actually hear them, but they are the proverbial glue that holds the waveform together.

The only reason people don't notice they're missing is because the brain is a powerful doohickey and does an amazing job of filling in those gaps on its own.

That doesn't change the fact that a digital representation, any digital representation, is just a facsimile.

As such, it's no different when it comes to film.

Now, in this case the input side is a bit more existential. It's simplest to just say "life" or "the world" is analog. Or rather, Hamill and Guinness are two "analogs" standing in a desert.

But the rest of the equation is the same: analog>digital>analog. And all that nuance, whether we can see it or not, gets lost.

The reasons media, and society as whole, are all economical in nature and have little to do with quality:

Digital is easy to store, as it takes little physical space and doesn't ever degrade.

It's easy to distribute and/or transport.

It can be copied infinitely without risk of quality loss.

These are all things that save companies money and, really, make things more convenient for the end-user.

*Even high-definition is more of a byproduct of outside technology than it is specifically being digital.

Non the less, if someone created a device that do all these things and still keep it analog, then we'd all still be using analog.
 
LOTR does look very nice in HD, and my HD box set of the Extended edition cost me less than what I spend on the orginal DVD version.
 
LOTR does look very nice in HD, and my HD box set of the Extended edition cost me less than what I spend on the orginal DVD version.

That's why I'm torn between buying the Hobbit films in the next three years, and waiting for a complete box set that will be much cheaper.
 
I'm likely to upgrade on a complete 6 film Middle Earth saga set.

Assuming that any attempt at doing, in some way, shape or form some Silmarillion films legally will never happen.
 
True, but I got the Blu-ray version years after it's original release, and it was on sale it cost me something like GB£25 (US$37).

I still got the extended version The Hobbit for around GB£10 less than the RRP.
 
People can argue all they want to about how those bits and pieces are inaudible--and they are--but that doesn't negate their importance. They're what add the nuance to the sound--that "warm" feeling.

As in even-order harmonic distortion producing a "warmer" type sound?
 
The Hobbit may be the first movie where I hope they have a "retracted edition" That cuts it down to pretty much what was only in the book.
 
Not any movies I would *rather* have on DVD but I'll usually settle for the DVD if it's not available on Blu-Ray (yet), if there is a good deal on something that I don't care whether or not I have it on Blu-Ray, or if I'm not in a hurry to upgrade something I already own (in which case I might wait to snap it up if/when I see a good deal on it). Given that many movies come with DVD versions, it's rarely even a consideration anymore.
 
The Hobbit may be the first movie where I hope they have a "retracted edition" That cuts it down to pretty much what was only in the book.

I agree. I grew up with the Rankin-Bass animated version and thought it was actually much more faithful to the book than the movie has been so far. Not that the movie is horrible or anything (glad that they brought back featured cast from LOTR) but I don't think that PJ really needed 3 movies to tell the basic story of The Hobbit. Maybe it was the only way PJ felt like he could get some of the expanded Tolkien material on film in some form?
 
Maybe it was the only way PJ felt like he could get some of the expanded Tolkien material on film in some form?
Might be part of it. The other part might be that it was the only way to get some female characters into the complete sausage-fest that is The Hobbit. And after seeing Tauriel, I ain't complainin'. :drool:
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top