Is it weird that I don't want Ambassadors of Death to be colorized? It looks so good in black and white!
But the desire is also there to restore the programmes to the way they were when they were first broadcast. So when you watch a VidFire'd Hartnell you're watching a simulation of what people actually saw on their TVs in 1963-64, and so the fact Ambassadors was aired in color, we should have it in color (and you can always tune out the color on your set if you'd like to recreate the B&W experience!![]()
Looking at those images at the URL my first reaction was " yeah, so?" And that's actually a good thing. Unlike some disastrous colorization I've seen in the past (usually involving films and TV shows that had no business being colorized) the fact you can't tell is a good sign (now I think about it this might be the first time I've come across colorization being used to actually restore color rather than treating B&W film and TV like a coloring book.
But the desire is also there to restore the programmes to the way they were when they were first broadcast. So when you watch a VidFire'd Hartnell you're watching a simulation of what people actually saw on their TVs in 1963-64, and so the fact Ambassadors was aired in color, we should have it in color (and you can always tune out the color on your set if you'd like to recreate the B&W experience!![]()
I actually did that with Mindwarp once-- it looks fantastic in black and white!
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