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Topic: Qautermas and the Pit Blu Ray.
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Mark Todd
Film God
Posts: 3846
From: UK
Registered: Aug 2003
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posted April 27, 2015 02:56 AM
Oh dear, I might have a punt on the Reptile next week but Q and the P will have to wait a while.
Thanks for the info.
Is the Reptile any good, as it gets very mixed reviews ?
I myself sort of wish they would stop buggering on about 4K and get the standard of Blu Rays up to the best they can do.
Its effectively another format, so surely sorting BR right out and dropping the price to sell loads more would make more sense.
Mind you if you comapre it to VHS prices and what you could get then etc its lovely and cheap.
I can`t help thinkong most collectors simply won`t hop ship, bar a very few, and maybe on odd titles. Good BR is much better than you need anyway surely. Even a decent effort made DVD is pretty good.
Better would be too shoot in 70mm, then go to BR or 4K BR.
Got the 1979 Languella Dracula for £6 delivered not long ago, so at least some are coming down. Quite sharp but the palette is bit low.
But I still think on the hammers £9.99 each usual, then 6.99 on offers etc they would sell 100 x of them.
I might start sending a few moaning and your missing a trick, holding the format back, emails, well its maybe worth a try!!!
Best Mark.
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Rob Young.
Phenomenal Film Handler
Posts: 1633
From: Cheshire, U.K.
Registered: Dec 2003
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posted April 30, 2015 12:27 PM
As well as Ultra-HD, think HDR.
High Dynamic Range.
Coming soon...
Sad thing is, this could be a real boon with the new 4K format, giving us all potentially much better images at home.
But so far, it is just left out on a limb...the "Blu-ray Disc Association" are, "quote", going to support an "open standard" on this...
Oh dear...
Ah well, at least this means that "old fashioned" HD displays and Blu-ray will get cheaper.
With a decent display; TV or projection, Blu-ray has offered us film fanatics a wealth of material that we could only have ever dreamt of seeing properly outside of a time-machine or a 35mm / 70mm projector set-up at home.
Companies, such as Arrow Video and Hammer, with releasing through Studio Canal, have genuinely tried to give film fans the best quality. These are really good times for film fans.
And the future will only get better...
Don't get me wrong; I'm a die-hard film fan. But today, I can watch "films" as the people making them intended. And appreciate them all the more.
Honestly, these are really great times for people that appreciate and care for cinema past and those that also look forward.
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