Not exactly. They were only rendered to SD resolution. If they still had the files they could render it out to HD.
DO they still have the files?
Not exactly. They were only rendered to SD resolution. If they still had the files they could render it out to HD.
Not exactly. They were only rendered to SD resolution. If they still had the files they could render it out to HD.
DO they still have the files?
Not exactly. They were only rendered to SD resolution. If they still had the files they could render it out to HD.
DO they still have the files?
The 90s re-edit of Touch of Evil is the only one of these re-works that I've ever approved of, and that's because Walter Murch recut the film based on a 52 page memo written by the director himself near the end of the film's original production, which is about as close to original intent as you can get. Otherwise, I tend to agree with Terry Gilliam, who said he'd not recut Brazil because he's no longer the same person he was when he made that film and it would be like cutting someone else's movie.
Once upon a time as an editing exercise I decided to play with tightening up TMP, and found it was actually pretty easy to pick up the pace simply by numerous tiny trims of the kind I like to refer to as "letting the air out". No major cuts. Few dialog deletions, but mostly making the cuts tighter (trim frames off the heads and tails of shots, etc.) I suspect it was an edit of that type Wise meant when in 1980 he said the film could be cut by 15 minutes at least.
As long as the unaltered work is also preserved, then another version with revisions is fine.
The theatrical version of TMP is still there.
I suspect that's not accurate re the Spock Walk, which is one of the fastest sequences in the film. The scenes I bet what he meant to cut were the drydock flyaround and the cloud/V'ger flyover.Once upon a time as an editing exercise I decided to play with tightening up TMP, and found it was actually pretty easy to pick up the pace simply by numerous tiny trims of the kind I like to refer to as "letting the air out". No major cuts. Few dialog deletions, but mostly making the cuts tighter (trim frames off the heads and tails of shots, etc.) I suspect it was an edit of that type Wise meant when in 1980 he said the film could be cut by 15 minutes at least.
I wonder if he wanted even deeper cuts than that. "The Films of Robert Wise" (Richard Keenan, 2007) sources an interview from August 13, 1981 in which the director said he wanted to cut both the Spock Walk and the Enterprise docking sequences by as much as a minute and a half -- each.
But that shot doesn't actually appear in any of the theatrical cuts. The only part of SF that we actually get to see (in any non-DE version) is the Golden Gate Bridge.
IIRC, in the original version of the "air tram shuttle" scene, there is a static shot of the bridge (in which we can see some kind of mass transit tracks have been added), then a static shot of the Federation logo, then it cuts to the inside of the tram building. When we see the outside of the bridge, the land where the city is supposed to be is empty - there is no city there at all. This fits with Gene's "vision" that everyone would be living underground, which I find shocking (that anyone would put up with living in such conditions).
I mean, it's fine that Gene wanted to protect the planet and all that, but not at the expense of human life. If Earth is a paradise in Trek's time, it should feel that way for the people, not just for the planet itself.
Also, if you'll check the theatrical cut, when we DO see the inside of the tram building, it's level with the water's edge. (This creates a discontinuity in the DE, since in that version we actually do see Kirk's shuttle, and it's heading for a building that's high up from the water like that one is.)
As long as the unaltered work is also preserved, then another version with revisions is fine.
The theatrical version of TMP is still there.
It is now. But we had to wait a long time before it was released on DVD and BD. I hope one day the SLV will be available as well.
I suspect that's not accurate re the Spock Walk, which is one of the fastest sequences in the film. The scenes I bet what he meant to cut were the drydock flyaround and the cloud/V'ger flyover.
A means of explaining the largest of those planets was that it was a sister planet named T'Khut or T'Kuht.^But was the fact that Vulcan had no moon a well known fact to the artist who did the matte painting?
And if they picked up the error in post production did they have the time/money to correct the mistake.
A means of explaining the largest of those planets was that it was a sister planet named T'Khut or T'Kuht.^But was the fact that Vulcan had no moon a well known fact to the artist who did the matte painting?
And if they picked up the error in post production did they have the time/money to correct the mistake.
The original film cuts from Vulcan to the shot of the airtram paralleling the Golden Gate Bridge and then to the logo on the floor and and finally to the tram station interior.
The tram station design and the city in the unused shot I posted match the shot that did end up in the film. I'm assuming the shot was done, wasn't considered to work for whatever reason, and never cut into the film. Or, if it was, it was in a workprint version we never saw.
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