Author
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Topic: March of the Wooden Solders
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Osi Osgood
Film God
Posts: 10204
From: Mountian Home, ID.
Registered: Jul 2005
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posted December 07, 2009 02:41 PM
My wife and I watched the colorized version of this on TV today, and I must confess, this is just about the only time I have actually enjoyed a colorized version of a film.
Usually, it seems that the "colorizers: only seem to work with a limited spectrum of perhaps 4 or 5 colors, which makes the colorizing patently obvious.
But in this Laurel and hardy film, the colorizing it quite good, and only really makes itself known in a few shots here and there. THe spectrum of color is quite good and almost natural. I bet that they wish that a good full color was available back then, (the two color technicolor wouldn't have been sufficient). Actually, three strip technicolor was in existence in 1932, (being made known in Disney's "Flowers and Trees"), but it just must have been too expensive for the producers tro work with.
It becomes even more evident when a Laurel and hardy short followed the feature, "The Live Ghost", and this one was the really awful colorizing.
A very good example of colorizing which I usually frown on. What it reminds me of is the "Super Cinecolor" process that was used for those two Abbott & Costello features, "Abbott & Costello Meet Captian Kidd" and "Jack & the Beanstalk", which almost had a colorized feel to them.
-------------------- "All these moments will be lost in time, just like ... tears, in the rain. "
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