I just checked and you’re right. It just has the scenes from that version on it. You would have to assemble it yourself.The “Special Longer Version” is not on DVD. Only on VHS I believe. Unfortunately.
I just checked and you’re right. It just has the scenes from that version on it. You would have to assemble it yourself.The “Special Longer Version” is not on DVD. Only on VHS I believe. Unfortunately.
I believe it always was just an illustration and not an actual photo of the 11 footer.It looks like an illustration, that's all I meant.
No, there is an SLV laser disc (I own a copy).The “Special Longer Version” (aka the “3 hour cut” or the ABC TV version) is not on DVD. I even think laserdisc only has the theatrical cut. Only on VHS has the SLV I believe. Unfortunately.
The SLV existed on both laserdisc and VHS. The theatrical version came back when Paramount began releasing letterbox versions of the ST movies in both formats.
I’ll have to try a get one of these laser discs then.
The true version would be if anyone actually recorded off the TV back then.
Holographic visitors using virtual reality.I hope they're still working on this prior to the disc release, they totally borked one part of this shot. The lower left area underneath the building overhang is a frozen frame, and you can see people half cut off and people walk behind the dissolve. The color doesn't match (looks like the power windows setting was in the wrong spot maybe?) ...that corner is a shambles. And it's not an error that appears in the next wide shot when Kirk and Sonak are on the mini-escalator.![]()
I have done my own DE/SLV hybrid and I think it works well. You do need to add background hum and bridge noises in places but once that's done it works great.Now I just need to see this “3 hour” TV cut of the film. I might have the DVD somewhere
Not going to try to upscale SLV scenes to UHD though. I don't think that would work.
Brand new observation lounge windows/wall/view
Could someone post screenshots of this scene?
(Paramount+ is not available in the Netherlands, or indeed in most countries. I won't rant about how CBS consistently neglects fans outside America...)
Thanks, @The Rock!
Judging from the screenshots, I'm not sure this was a wise change... Looks like the actors are rather awkwardly cut out.
Also, is it my imagination, or did they give Shatner a little trim in the midsection?![]()
That is pretty grotesque. I hope the team is still together and can sharpen some of this stuff up.
Yeah, that scene looks **rough**. There's one shot where Kirk and McCoy look like blurry VHS quality cutouts.
I don’t understand their need to alter this scene as far as they needed to. I just accept in the original cut that they’re in a private room and the observation deck. The two main reasons why that scene looks so bad is because they’re attempting to key out parts of the scene that weren’t designed ti be that way and they obviously didn’t have the original elements to make it look high quality.Yeah, I was pretty alarmed by just how low quality the image was in places during that. Bones' face almost disappears into nothing but clumped pixels and soft edges at one point.
They can’t. This is a classic “when you copy a positive, you get a negative” example. You need the original elements to make this as high quality as you can get.That is pretty grotesque. I hope the team is still together and can sharpen some of this stuff up.
There's an interview with Fein linked at Trekmovie and Trekcore. He's rambles quite a bit. But, yes, he said they had access to a lot of the original ADR tracks and were able to reinsert and remix the dialogue to be more balanced.Unless my hearing is playing tricks on me, it sounds like the dialogue has been remixed, I’m guessing they must have gone back to the original audio stems to create the new sound mix? It really became apparent to me when Kirk was speaking with Sonak. It sounds more natural. I wish I could be more articulate on how to describe the difference.
What I’ve always wanted to know was whether the theatrical version was ever released on VHS/BETA before the SLV.
The theatrical was available first in 1981 on VHS, Beta, LaserDisc, and CED videodisc.The SLV existed on both laserdisc and VHS. The theatrical version came back when Paramount began releasing letterbox versions of the ST movies in both formats.
What I’ve always wanted to know was whether the theatrical version was ever released on VHS/BETA before the SLV.
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