Why sadly? Why should the vast majority be able to tell the difference?There is a difference between 35mm (and definitely 70mm) and HD. But sadly, the vast majority of people won't be able to tell the difference nor care.
Tribe
I'm nuts too, but it's pretty safe to say HD and Blu-ray will be obsolete, or well on their way, in 10 years as well.hearthesilence wrote:I gotta say, it's driving me crazy, because regardless of the outcome, I LOVE the idea of having an HD format, and I'm pretty sure I can budget myself to buy the new stuff necessary to use it, but I feel kind of foolish buying DVD's right now. They may not be 'obsolete' ten years from now, but if a Blu Ray or HD DVD version of the same title comes out, I'm pretty sure I'm going to get it.
You make an excellent point. I'm happy with the look on most of the DVDs... Will a High Def DVD really improve "The Bank Dick" or "Grand Illusions" or even "The River"?pzman84 wrote:I think another factor in the Hi Def war no one talks about is the films themselves. While I would love to see "Lawrence of Arabia" and "The Matrix" in Hi Def, most films don't need such high quality. I mean, if you've seen "Kangaroo Jack" on VHS, your opinion will probably not change even if you see it in IMAX.
Classic films are good examples. While "The Seventh Seal" and "Citizen Kane" looked better on DVD than they ever did on VHS, I doubt Hi Def DVDs will make much of a difference. Also, the DVDs of the above-mentioned titles are already very good. I like the DVD format and, with a few notable exceptions, most of my favorite films on DVD are already great.
Yes.You make an excellent point. I'm happy with the look on most of the DVDs... Will a High Def DVD really improve "The Bank Dick" or "Grand Illusions" or even "The River"?
but that says Image is holding off, not really definitive on whether or not Criterion will pick a camp before the war is over. or maybe it is... I don't know.Image Entertainment, which distributes film buff line The Criterion Collection, will stay out of high-definition DVD altogether until manufacturing prices drop, CEO Martin Greenwald said at the B Riley Investor Conference Wednesday.
A beacon of hope! As for Criterion movies available on HD-DVD, there's Dazed & Confused, Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas, La Haine (which looks amazing!) and Jimi Plays Monterey.fdm wrote:Relevant snippet from it: "We've mastered in high-definition for years now. We just have to take the tapes and compress them in an HD codec. We did a Blu-Ray test of one of our titles, and we're really happy with the results."