Tommaso wrote:Well, even if you (unbelievably for me) do not see the difference between the Kino "Holy Mountain" and its MoC counterpart as far as image is concerned ( I rarely saw another DVD with more ghosting problems than that Kino one), the MoC would still obviously be superior because it has the German intertitles and NO fiddling around with the several writings in the film-images themselves. And the latter goes for "Mabuse" probably, as it goes for "Michael" and likely the list could be extended..
It's got to be your TV because the MoC Holy Mountain is spiked with combing as it is an interlaced transfer-- I own the Kino and have seen the MoC and quite frankly neither is a 'perfect' release (maybe the NTSC-Pal conversion on your player gives you a double whammy), but both of them are quite nice nonprogressive transfers. Isn't the Eureka MABUSE interlaced? Why isn't anyone screaming about combing?
My point is there is a HUUUUUGE difference between Facets & Kino, at least when it comes to silent films. I go bazonkers like anyone else when combing or ghosting is so uneccessarily severe that it blinkers the viewing process. The reality is that there are very very few Kino silents that fall into this category. When HOLY MOUNTAIN first came out I was so stunned by the beauty of the photography that I showed it to cinephile after cinephile... after cinephile. Niether I nor anyone else could detect anything residing there on the disc besides a nice disc of a gorgeous restoration.
I still would like to know-- who is busting out new progressive transfers for silent films (because this is all it seems to boil down to, since the image in the actual frames are not the question)? WHO?? Who is doing what you guys are looking for? And why is Kino seen as different than Milestone, Criterion, BFI, AEye, Eureka, when it comes to silent films?
You guys keep mentioning MoC, but most of their silents are interlaced (and they are IN the PAL region, too, so the discs could be progressively encoded with greater ease). They are not doing their own transfers on silents, which is why most of them are interlaced and artifact-haunted. FAUST was their first silent in at least a year. There was a comment that maybe if Kino released one silent a year too, maybe their rep would be like MoC's... whereas I see MoC, right now, as a rare but wonderful compliment to the status quo of the silent film market, allowing me to replace the occasional title with a more recent restoration. A delightful
luxury, folks. The
rarest delicacy. Buying the two or three relatively recent progressively encoded MoC silent discs and now creating an unreasonable & nonextistent, global industry standard with which to beat old veteran companies over the head with, ie BFI, Kino, Milestone, AEye, etc, -- it's absurd.
How many times does Nick have to come on here and personally explain how cost prohibitive it is for him to go back and pull a new transfer for his older interlaced titles? It was cost-prohibitive then, and it's cost prohibitive now. He's now taking the risk on all of our behalf, of investing that extra wad of cash to encode the digibetas he's given progressively, which he's ONLY trying on the FAUST's, the METROPOLIS', the SUNRISE's. No brainers. To now turn around and expect co's to do that for titles half of even YOU people never even heard of (if
you guys have never heard of them,
forget the real world) like WARNING SHADOWS (German Tommasso thought it had intertitles), the Stillers, Kirsanoff, is about the silliest thing I've ever heard in my life. And this is not just in defense of Kino, it's to take the pressure off of MoC, CC, Milestone, etc, because I want to see these films... and so long as the film has been restored, and a skillful enough handling of the transfer is done to where interlacing or an extra frame exists out of ever 4 or 5 is not visible during the viewing process, I'm in cinema-love paradise. I watch these and am in absolute hog heaven, as long as artifacting is not BERLIN-style intrusive, and this includes, MoC, Kino, Milestone, BFI, CC-- they're all guilty of it. It's status quo for silents.
If MoC can eventually achieve a profit margin that allows them to invest a fortune into producing 1-3 silents (especially ones that no-one's seen before, I mean introduce lost, obscure masterpieces the way the above guys do, i e make it a business Regularly Releasing Silent Film) then they will have changed the rules of the game. Until then, it irritates me because these are the films that I love the most, I love to discuss them and toss ideas around about them, and it breaks my heart to see these masterpieces passed over for essentially mythological reasons and reasons of unreasonable bias. And it's a bringdown hearing a pretty decent discussion site being corroded by such juvenility and vinegar.. particularly considering where the hatred for this one co in particular originates, which is one site and one dude more than anyone else.
And skuhn8,
stop drinking. You're getting all nuthouse-tangy again and I can't even understand anything you're writing. Hopefully the trip you're going on includes harp music strummed by Xanaxed nature-freaks, and features lotion-applications & seaweed wrap to the diaper rash on the achybreaky brainparts....