Glorious Technicolor
Posted: Sat Feb 17, 2007 5:45 am
My gf bought me the HD DVD drive for my Xbox at Christmas and since then I've been buying a few HD DVDs and enjoying them: Batman Begins is very good.
However, I've been blown away by the restored HD version of the 1938 classic, The Adventures of Robin Hood, which I got the other day. It's always been one of my favourites; Errol Flynn is Robin Hood for me, dashing, roughish, athletic and Olivia deHavilland the most beautiful and charming Marian. Add to that Basil Rathbone and Claude Rains as Sir Guy and Prince John, two of Hollywood's best character actors. A great script that just takes you along for 102 minutes of pure fantasy. What a difference from the recent tripe put out by the BBC with a weasel eyed youth playing Robin Hood and scripts that totally ignored the possibilities of the character.
Ok, all well and good, but the new version was restored using a process invented by someone at Warners called Ultra Resolution that digitally re-aligns the three strip Technicolor film to the orginal state it was in when released in 1938(the process is nominated for a technical Oscar this year). The result is amazing, the detail is such that you can count the chain mail rings and see the embroidery on the costumes. As for the colour you can see why they used to call it Glorious Technicolor, it's like a painting brought to life. Stunning. If you don't have HD DVD there is a special edition DVD that uses the same master and looks stunning on that too.
However, I've been blown away by the restored HD version of the 1938 classic, The Adventures of Robin Hood, which I got the other day. It's always been one of my favourites; Errol Flynn is Robin Hood for me, dashing, roughish, athletic and Olivia deHavilland the most beautiful and charming Marian. Add to that Basil Rathbone and Claude Rains as Sir Guy and Prince John, two of Hollywood's best character actors. A great script that just takes you along for 102 minutes of pure fantasy. What a difference from the recent tripe put out by the BBC with a weasel eyed youth playing Robin Hood and scripts that totally ignored the possibilities of the character.
Ok, all well and good, but the new version was restored using a process invented by someone at Warners called Ultra Resolution that digitally re-aligns the three strip Technicolor film to the orginal state it was in when released in 1938(the process is nominated for a technical Oscar this year). The result is amazing, the detail is such that you can count the chain mail rings and see the embroidery on the costumes. As for the colour you can see why they used to call it Glorious Technicolor, it's like a painting brought to life. Stunning. If you don't have HD DVD there is a special edition DVD that uses the same master and looks stunning on that too.