
Sure I know the pictureboxing border gives it away.. but only adds fuel to the argument that the new transfer was definitely NOT an emergency. So a new transfer came around, big whoops. BN's new transfer's been around too for awhile.

However, like I said in another thread, the whole point of Criterion is that it's supposed to be "the best"HerrSchreck wrote:I dont think CC will go HD until it takes over the industry and SD occupies as small a corner as HD does now. With specialty titles like this I don't think they can afford to be manufacturing/encoding two different sets, designs, etc. Too costly for arthouse home vid. Until they go all the way over, I don't we'll see a drop.
Like pictureboxing, they're going to keep their nose in where the mass market is. ANd its still in SD.
The reductio ad absurdum of this is Criterion marketing lovely new 'collectors' 35mm prints to two or three collectors in opulent velvet-lined boxes. If the sole aim is to be definitive, isn't that the way to go?Darth Lavender wrote:However, like I said in another thread, the whole point of Criterion is that it's supposed to be "the best"HerrSchreck wrote:I dont think CC will go HD until it takes over the industry and SD occupies as small a corner as HD does now. With specialty titles like this I don't think they can afford to be manufacturing/encoding two different sets, designs, etc. Too costly for arthouse home vid. Until they go all the way over, I don't we'll see a drop.
Like pictureboxing, they're going to keep their nose in where the mass market is. ANd its still in SD.
Criterion isn't about the 'mass market' (think the mass market will pay $50 for a movie?) It's supposed to be about the serious videophiles and cinema enthusiasts.
People pay extra for the Criterion edition because they want the highest quality, and the highest quality now is High Definition.
In "SD" days, one would buy a Criterion DVD and say the movie can't look any better than this (except in a theatre) But, now, I see each new Criterion release as intentially 'second rate' Now, second-rate may still look pretty good, but it kind of defeats the whole purpose of a definitive release (which is what Criterion is supposed to be about.)
On the subject of art-house on HD, we've already got Ran and Fear & Loathing.HerrSchreck wrote:The logic is so upside down and ignorant of a desire to see these guys stay in sensible business-- who is releasing arthouse on HD anyway, that makes CC no longer the "best" versions of the titles they put out? HD may be the best for SPIDERMAN, but are CC really being trumped in the SYMBIOTAXIPLASM market?
And why single out CC? Why not MoC, BFI too?
No, sorry - got mine from Amazon.fr back when it was first released. FNAC sometimes has the bad habit of leaving unavailable material on its website (even though it promises delivery in 4 to 8 days).golgothicon wrote:Did you receive it? I ordered it twice there and both times my order was cancelled.
Does anyone know yet whether this will in fact be region-coded?ellipsis7 wrote:BTW ITV DVD are releasing BLACK NARCISSUS on Blu Ray on 16th June...
Well, there you go. What more could possibly be said about The Film?Skuj wrote:What about The Film then, all you Technogeeks?(I have the CC, and it looks stunning on my old tv. I think I have a problem or two with this whole HD thing....but I digress...)
Kathleen Byron is the embodiment of The Scariest Bitch Ever, in this film. Yes? What they do to her face/eyes at the end has always haunted me. I think this is another under-rated film. Incredibly erotic!
Oh, we could talk endlessly about its elaborate and symbolic colour schemes, that GLORIOUS technicolor (not so glorious on the CC, though), the first 'composed film'-sequence in Powell's work, the possible reference to Cocteau's "La belle et la bete" (remember those winding curtains when Byron flees from the monastery?), the conflicting approaches to love and religion as embodied by Sister Ruth, Sister Clodagh and Kanchi (and how great Jean Simmons is in that role!), and so on...Matt wrote:Well, there you go. What more could possibly be said about The Film?