The other The Leopard thread on here (an email from Madman to eerik). BUT when I went to check just then I noticed that yesterday Paku posted that he was told that it WOULD be the new restoration.perkizitore wrote:Where did you get this info?Peacock wrote:The Madman doesn't use the new restoration, which means I'm guessing it's a port of the BFI/Criterion master.triodelover wrote:So that leaves four contestants: Criterion, BFI, Madman and Medusa. That latter two are from the supposedly superior Film Foundation/Scorsese resto;
The Leopard
Moderator: MichaelB
- Peacock
- Joined: Mon Dec 22, 2008 7:47 pm
- Location: Scotland
Re: The Leopard
- TMDaines
- Joined: Wed Nov 11, 2009 1:01 pm
- Location: Stretford, Manchester
Re: The Leopard
Why are you interesting in getting me to argue about something I wasn't addressing? I was never talking about the total package as I keep saying nor the aspect ratio. I was talking about the quality and clarity of the image.triodelover wrote:I wonder if you'd care to address the specific points in my last two posts rather than keep insisting that the Pathé and Medusa discs are inarguably superior? Again, I'm not saying that they are not, but until one has seen them in motion on the same system that the Crit or BFI is viewed, how can you possibly be so certain?
Sure, as I don't have the Italian/French disk I'm not a primary source of evidence but I'm not trying to influence anyone here. From the screenshots the level of detail on one disk is clearly superior to the other. I'm not saying those disks are perfect either for what it's worth.
- matrixschmatrix
- Joined: Tue May 25, 2010 11:26 pm
Re: The Leopard
You are trying to claim that the one is inarguably superior to the other- inarguable to the degree that you are censuring Criterion for attempting to argue it- on the basis of a couple of screenhots which may not be representative. The new resto may well be superior, but I have no idea of why you think it inappropriate for Criterion to present their case for why they did not use it, particularly as you have such scanty evidence for what the new-resto disc actually looks like.
- TMDaines
- Joined: Wed Nov 11, 2009 1:01 pm
- Location: Stretford, Manchester
Re: The Leopard
I didn't ask them to present any case, I just found one comment bizarre. Nevermind, no more, you can win.
- triodelover
- Joined: Sat Jan 27, 2007 2:11 pm
- Location: The hills of East Tennessee
Re: The Leopard
Thank you.matrixschmatrix wrote:You are trying to claim that the one is inarguably superior to the other- inarguable to the degree that you are censuring Criterion for attempting to argue it- on the basis of a couple of screenhots which may not be representative. The new resto may well be superior, but I have no idea of why you think it inappropriate for Criterion to present their case for why they did not use it, particularly as you have such scanty evidence for what the new-resto disc actually looks like.
I'm not trying to get you to argue. I'm trying to get you to present evidence for your repeated assertions of superiority. Matrix is correct . And again, I'm not talking about the total package either, but surely in any discussion of image AR is relevant since it defines exactly how much image you see.TMDaines wrote:Why are you interesting in getting me to argue about something I wasn't addressing? I was never talking about the total package as I keep saying nor the aspect ratio. I was talking about the quality and clarity of the image.
Continued assertions of inarguable superiority certainly come across as attempts to influence.TMDaines wrote:Sure, as I don't have the Italian/French disk I'm not a primary source of evidence but I'm not trying to influence anyone here.
To you, grasshopper, to you. Once again I will remind you that there is dissension in the ranks about the red saturation on the Pathé disc and even the advocates of the Medusa disc admit to the crushed blacks and contrast issues. Both of these things are obvious from the screen caps you have been looking at. How can you say the detail of the Medusa is superior (look again at the cap of Angelica in close-up compared to the Crit) if you don't even have the disc to correct the contrast on your system? From the screen caps, the Crit appears to have loads more detail - look at her hair. What about the yellow tinge to her skin on the Medusa (being in mind my previous caveats)?TMDaines wrote: From the screenshots the level of detail on one disk is clearly superior to the other.
To repeat - it is entirely within the realm of possibility that both the Pathé and the Medusa discs contain superior visual presentations, even with the noted problems. I'm certainly open to that eventuality and that's why I'm recording the TCM viewing to give me a better idea about that and the irrelevant AR (pace) before paying the prohibitive shipping costs from Amazon.it. That's not ideal - I'd rather be able to compare the discs, but it's a damn site better that asserting that static screen caps that may have not be achieved using the same process/software viewed on a computer monitor with all the noted calibration issues attached to computer systems prove that one version is clearly superior to the other.
(BTW, I know you deny this but your continued comments sure make it sound as if you have an ax to grind with Criterion. Ypu might want to take a look at how you've worded things if that's not the impression you'd like to convey.)
If anyone else has bothered to plow through my verbiage to this point, what is the rationale for the 2.55:1 AR used in the Film Foundation/Scorsese resto? Scorsese is a fanatical restorer (to his credit) and since it seems clear that Visconti and Rotunno intended 2.21:1, what necessitated the change?
(Thanks, swo. Love the shot.)
Reviewing this exchange brings me to inescapable conclusion that a 140 character limit would be the death of me.
- pro-bassoonist
- Joined: Wed Jun 07, 2006 12:26 am
Re: The Leopard
I agree. I have actually seen the Pathe disc (but not the Italian disc), and while the grain structure is clearly stronger (due to the higher res scan) it is not to the extent some (familiar) people make it out to be, implying that the Criterion transfer has an "electronic" look, etc. It is the new line: The Criterion has an older scan so it must be horrendous. It is not. By the way, the same non-sense addressing 12 Angry Men is currently in circulation as well.matrixschmatrix wrote:You are trying to claim that the one is inarguably superior to the other- inarguable to the degree that you are censuring Criterion for attempting to argue it- on the basis of a couple of screenhots which may not be representative. The new resto may well be superior, but I have no idea of why you think it inappropriate for Criterion to present their case for why they did not use it, particularly as you have such scanty evidence for what the new-resto disc actually looks like.
The real problem with the Pathe release, however, is the color-scheme. The variety of yellows and browns, and especially the harsh orange, are completely off the chart.
In other words, a "newer scan" with a slightly superior detail and a tighter grain structure does not automatically equate "superior".
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- Joined: Mon Dec 05, 2011 1:23 am
Re: The Leopard
The restoration displays a tighter grain structure and a significant amount of extra detail, suggesting that the BFI/Criterion wasn't taken from an 8-Perf negative or print (ie. similar to Criterion's Playtime balldropper). Whilst there is a problem with the black levels on the Italian release, Nabob is the first person to complain about 'murky interiors' on the French and, as this comparison shows, it is actually the Criterion/BFI which seems to be lacking shadow detail:MichaelB wrote:I have no plans to replace my perfectly good BFI Blu-ray of The Leopard
Imho the BFI could do the English-speaking world a great service by re-issuing The Leopard at some point down the line. At the very least, you should review the French edition for yourselves.
- NABOB OF NOWHERE
- Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2005 12:30 pm
- Location: Brandywine River
Re: The Leopard
I didn't use the phrase murky interiors but spoke only of the density of the blacks in the interior villa scenes which I find too 'sat down' for my liking and I did not draw a more favourable comparison on this matter from any other sources. I will state again that I find the transfer "sublime" and am quite at ease with the fleshtones etc in the interiors which I believe others might have had an issue with. So please do not mangle my statements into a negative or nay-saying vote for the French issue. I made a little intervention in a tortuously highjacked Kino thread speculating about the plethora of Leopard releases as someone who had a copy of the Pathé in their possession, that's all. If you want to find a review of the Pathé which is unequivocally rhapsodic and a bit sniffy about Criterion then check out Sandy Gillet's review on ecranlarge. BTW -The same guy who buried the Pathé Samourai blu.oneshotmonkey wrote:Whilst there is a problem with the black levels on the Italian release, Nabob is the first person to complain about 'murky interiors' on the French and, as this comparison shows, it is actually the Criterion/BFI which seems to be lacking shadow detail:
- Fred Holywell
- Joined: Thu Jun 10, 2010 11:45 pm
Re: The Leopard
No, Visconti and Rotunno 'intended' a 2.35:1 aspect ratio, but protected for, at least, 2.21, 1.85, and 2.66:1 framing. At the time, 35mm Cinemascope compatible Technirama prints had a 2.35:1 frame. Full-frame Technirama was, indeed, 2.21:1, but the top of the frame was essentially 'dead space' easily cropped without affecting the compostition. In other words, the image is on the negative, but not on 35mm anamorphic prints. If 70mm 2.21:1 prints had been run, the image at the top of the neg would be printed up.If anyone else has bothered to plow through my verbiage to this point, what is the rationale for the 2.55:1 AR used in the Film Foundation/Scorsese resto? Scorsese is a fanatical restorer (to his credit) and since it seems clear that Visconti and Rotunno intended 2.21:1, what necessitated the change?
The reason for the 2.55:1 ar on The Film Foundation restoration is unclear, but it is a valid Technirama aspect ratio. The image appears to be (without seeing the original neg) 2.35:1 framing with some cropping at the top and bottom of the frame. The wider ar does allow for CRT monitor overscan, I suppose, and the picture info is basically more 'dead space' that would be cropped on some prints, anyway. FYI, new theatrical prints made from this restoration should have an ar of 2.39:1, in keeping with current specs.
What's often forgotten today is that Technirama was a multi-format, various ar system, similar to VistaVision. Initially, the Technicolor company hoped the process would be a 'one-size-fits-all solution' for all compatibility concerns. By the early 1960s, Technirama (or SuperTechnirama) prints were available in 70mm (SuperPanavision & UltraPanavision compatible); 35mm anamorphic; 35mm flat; and 16mm anamorphic. Since framing had to be protected for several different aspect ratios, camera movement and staging were often carefully, but necessarily, limited.
Last edited by Fred Holywell on Fri Dec 16, 2011 6:54 am, edited 2 times in total.
- Fred Holywell
- Joined: Thu Jun 10, 2010 11:45 pm
Re: The Leopard
Those two screen caps are originally from the French DVD Classik site, I believe. Top is the old Gaumont Pathe DVD released several years ago. Bottom is their new DVD (or BluRay) of The Film Foundation restoration. Neither image is the Criterion or BFI version. The older GP disc is, indeed, a rather murky affair made from what appear to be multiple sources -- some better looking than others.as this comparison shows, it is actually the Criterion/BFI which seems to be lacking shadow detail:
- triodelover
- Joined: Sat Jan 27, 2007 2:11 pm
- Location: The hills of East Tennessee
Re: The Leopard
Thank you, Fred. The Medusa is in transit to me as we speak, so we shall see.Fred Holywell wrote:The reason for the 2.55:1 ar on The Film Foundation restoration is unclear, but it is a valid Technirama aspect ratio. The image appears to be (without seeing the original neg) 2.35:1 framing with some cropping at the top and bottom of the frame. The wider ar does allow for CRT monitor overscan, I suppose, and the picture info is basically more 'dead space' that would be cropped on some prints, anyway. FYI, new theatrical prints made from this restoration should have an ar of 2.39:1, in keeping with current specs.triodelover wrote:If anyone else has bothered to plow through my verbiage to this point, what is the rationale for the 2.55:1 AR used in the Film Foundation/Scorsese resto? Scorsese is a fanatical restorer (to his credit) and since it seems clear that Visconti and Rotunno intended 2.21:1, what necessitated the change?
- Fred Holywell
- Joined: Thu Jun 10, 2010 11:45 pm
Re: The Leopard
Criterion/BFI screencap (top) added for comparison with old Gaumont Pathe (middle) and new Gaumont Pathe via The Film Foundation restoration (bottom).
Last edited by Fred Holywell on Mon Jul 02, 2012 6:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
- hearthesilence
- Joined: Fri Mar 04, 2005 4:22 am
- Location: NYC
Re: The Leopard
Have no idea if those caps are an accurate representation, but the Criterion looks the best in terms of color and picture quality. The other two look surprisingly crappy (crushed blacks, off color and/or mushy detail).
Don't know if the Criterion is (wrongfully) cropping the sides, but I'd still watch it over the others.
Don't know if the Criterion is (wrongfully) cropping the sides, but I'd still watch it over the others.
- tenia
- Ask Me About My Bassoon
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 11:13 am
Re: The Leopard
From what I remember, there are still 2 questions left with the new restoration : where the 2.55 ratio and the very hot colors come from ?
Apart from that, the Pathé BD blows away any other BD of the movie so far. When comparing the BFI / Criterion VS the Pathé, it's like comparing a DVD and a BD.
Apart from that, the Pathé BD blows away any other BD of the movie so far. When comparing the BFI / Criterion VS the Pathé, it's like comparing a DVD and a BD.
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- Joined: Mon Dec 05, 2011 1:23 am
Re: The Leopard
These compressed SD captures are only useful for broadly assessing the colour correction and composition. Composition-wise, the old Pathe looks best to me, but the restoration runs a close second. The BFI/Criterion is shockingly cropped on the left hand side, just awful. Colour correction: I prefer the restoration too. The darker colours are not crushed, just more muted and subtle. This will really come to life when projected. The BFI/Criterion is artificially boosted to suit consumer television sets.hearthesilence wrote:Have no idea if those caps are an accurate representation, but the Criterion looks the best in terms of color and picture quality. The other two look surprisingly crappy (crushed blacks, off color and/or mushy detail). Don't know if the Criterion is (wrongfully) cropping the sides, but I'd still watch it over the others.
When you consider also the superior level of detail and tighter grain structure on the Pathe/Restoration, the Criterion/BFI really has been knocked out of the park.
- triodelover
- Joined: Sat Jan 27, 2007 2:11 pm
- Location: The hills of East Tennessee
Re: The Leopard
I'm not picking on you, tenia, because I've seen a plethora of similar statements on this forum and elsewhere, but what you're saying is like me saying, "Apart from my thinning grey hair, expanding waistline and dark brown eyes, I could be Paul Newman's twin brother." I'm not sure what the vested interests are or even if they are the same, but there seems to be a concerted effort to declare the Film Foundation resto the finest version of Gattopardo while at the same time declaring the Crit/BFI crap. Each and every declaration I've read usually begins by eliminating the problem areas of the FF version (AR, crushed blacks, over-saturated/hot color palette) from consideration and then waxing rhapsodic about the detail and grain structure (largely from looking at screen grabs as far as I can tell). What we seem to have in reality is two flawed presentations each of which excel in certain areas that compliment rather than correspond with each other.tenia wrote:From what I remember, there are still 2 questions left with the new restoration : where the 2.55 ratio and the very hot colors come from ?
Apart from that, the Pathé BD blows away any other BD of the movie so far. When comparing the BFI / Criterion VS the Pathé, it's like comparing a DVD and a BD.
I presume you are able to assert the former because you have actually seen both versions in motion on a calibrated system, either display or projection, and the latter because you have confirmed the artificially boosting and its purpose with both BFI and Criterion.oneshotmonkey wrote:The darker colours are not crushed, just more muted and subtle. This will really come to life when projected. The BFI/Criterion is artificially boosted to suit consumer television sets.
Once again for the record I don't particularly care which is the "bestest, coolest ever". I own the Crit and the Medusa is in transit. Between the two I expect I'll have - one way or another - the best available now which, as a fan of the film, is what I seek. What I rail against is the breathless hyperbole used in announcing one is superior and the other dreck without even a pretense of applying the scientific method. No listing of the system/software, etc used to view the film(s). Nothing offered on the viewing conditions (ambient light, extraneous noise, etc). Most of the time it's not really clear if the correspondent has actually compared both version side-by-side in motion. Maybe I'm just a grumpy old man, but if you are going to make assertions about the technical superiority of one over the other, shouldn't you be expected to tell what you did to arrive at those conclusions? Otherwise, all the posts belong here.
- TMDaines
- Joined: Wed Nov 11, 2009 1:01 pm
- Location: Stretford, Manchester
Re: The Leopard
Relax mate. It's just a Blu-ray, not the Large Hadron Collider. You don't have to go through the scientific method just to have a valid opinion, nor do you have to own both to make a judgement on which you'd prefer to have. That's why there are reviews on the Internet after all.
- triodelover
- Joined: Sat Jan 27, 2007 2:11 pm
- Location: The hills of East Tennessee
Re: The Leopard
You'll pardon me, buddy-boy, but my substandard education as a scientist makes me want to know how people arrive at conclusions. Particularly when those conclusions are delivered like Moses descending from the mount, tablets in hand. And I'm not buying the Medusa because I'm dissatisfied with the Criterion but because the hyperbole piqued my curiosity and because I haven't found any reviews that compare the BFI/Crit to the Pathé/Medusa in a useful way. Finally, because of my past experiences in high end audio, I tend to be skeptical of reviewers unless I have established a track record for them.
- Peacock
- Joined: Mon Dec 22, 2008 7:47 pm
- Location: Scotland
Re: The Leopard
What's wrong with comparing screen captures? Sure it's often not very scientific but it works for 99% of us. I can look at dvdbeaver - despite their compression problems, and despite my macbook monitor, and say that the Criterion has deeper blacks or say that the colours on the Criterion Red Shoes are warmer than on the ITV. Likewise you can look at these screen caps and say that the Pathe has hotter colours and crushed blacks than the BFI/Criterion. No it's not a scientific analysis, but it's enough...
None of The Leopard releases are ideal, I don't see a problem with people trying to work out which is the best, all things considered...
None of The Leopard releases are ideal, I don't see a problem with people trying to work out which is the best, all things considered...
- triodelover
- Joined: Sat Jan 27, 2007 2:11 pm
- Location: The hills of East Tennessee
Re: The Leopard
You will note that Gary and his other reviewers provide detailed information on their systems and Gary has provided detailed info on how the captures are achieved. He's been taken to task more than once in this forum for his captures.Peacock wrote:What's wrong with comparing screen captures? Sure it's often not very scientific but it works for 99% of us. I can look at dvdbeaver - despite their compression problems, and despite my macbook monitor, and say that the Criterion has deeper blacks or say that the colours on the Criterion Red Shoes are warmer than on the ITV. Likewise you can look at these screen caps and say that the Pathe has hotter colours and crushed blacks than the BFI/Criterion. No it's not a scientific analysis, but it's enough
There's nothing wrong with taking a look at reviews based on screen caps and making a purchasing decision. I presume we all do it. My issue is with proclaiming one BD definitive or obviously far superior and the other crap - strong terms - without sharing how you arrived at that conclusion - and I don't think looking at someone else's screen caps on a computer monitor supports that level of certainty.
(FWIW, I reach exactly the same conclusion as you comparing the screen caps for The Red Shoes and Il Gattopardo which is why I take issue with eliminating the problems and then pronouncing one version superior. It's also why I want to do an actual comparison myself to determine how much difference the flaws affect enjoyment of the film in motion.)
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- Joined: Mon Dec 05, 2011 1:23 am
Re: The Leopard
I have a calibrated broadcast monitor and anyone accustomed to looking at such things should be able to make the same observations. It really doesn't matter whether or not the images are in motion. Certainly, the blacks on the Pathe are not crushed, it just has a more natural, film-like gamma curve. I'm still not seeing how these releases compliment each other.triodelover wrote:I presume you are able to assert the former because you have actually seen both versions in motion on a calibrated system, either display or projection, and the latter because you have confirmed the artificially boosting and its purpose with both BFI and Criterion.
- hearthesilence
- Joined: Fri Mar 04, 2005 4:22 am
- Location: NYC
Re: The Leopard
Okay, I just revisited the Criterioncast blog and the caps there were much more revealing. Opened up at 100% resolution (for the caps, I should say), the Criterion captures looked gritter, like it had more and larger grain, while the other Blu-Ray looked cleaner and crisper and sharper and not in a DNR way. Again, don't know if their caps are accurate, but if they are, it's pretty startling.
- HJackson
- Joined: Wed Jul 20, 2011 7:27 pm
Re: The Leopard
I recall being mightily impressed by the BFI back when I first got it (so impressed, in fact, that I watched it about four times in one week), but if the caps on Criterioncast are accurate (and the BFI caps do look fairly accurate - although they undermine how good the disc looks in motion) then it seems pretty clear that the new restoration is miles better.
- TMDaines
- Joined: Wed Nov 11, 2009 1:01 pm
- Location: Stretford, Manchester