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#16
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Last edited by JoeD80; 10-18-2008 at 12:51 PM. |
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#17
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Why? Because of the discrepancy between what real HD is (encoding from the source material) and SD upscaled to HD (which is what the mixed and full CGI scenes would be in this case). I think this has been argued to death in the existing HD thread, but look at it from WBs side why there won't be a blu-ray version: 1. Blu-ray market is a niche market for HD and quality "obsessed" people. Quality is not possible because of the current CGI problems (especially concerning the mixed scenes). 2. CGI needs to be re-done from scratch for point one to be valid. This costs a lot of money and time. 3. WB is not interested in spending money and time to bring out a blu-ray version for a TV-show that does not have a big fanbase. 4. In general, take a look at what TV-shows that come out on blu-ray. In most cases it is only new releases. Old shows rarely gets the blu treatment, unfortunately. Again marketing plays a role in this. How WB treats blu-ray movies in general when it comes to quality is yet another discussion... |
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#18
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Firefly is coming out on Blu-Ray next month (Nov. 11th for those curious) and it's not a new series, plus it certainly didn't have the time to build as big a fanbase as B5. If they can do it, certainly B5 can. Last edited by JoeD80; 10-18-2008 at 01:48 PM. |
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#19
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The two greatest factors against blu-ray is quality and money, CGI being the big issue here. While I'd like to be optimistic, I just cannot see WB giving Babylon 5 the blu-ray treatment at this time. |
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#20
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The point being was that another sci-fi show was being released on blu-ray. |
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#21
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#22
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Last edited by JoeD80; 10-18-2008 at 02:46 PM. |
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#23
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DVD has the majority market share. Whatever numbers you dig up, that is a fact. Again I emphasize: The two greatest factors against blu-ray is quality and money, CGI being the big issue here. While I'd like to be optimistic, I just cannot see WB giving Babylon 5 the blu-ray treatment at this time. So let's not keep going in circles about statistics or numbers. Because those factors are real for WB. Last edited by oldjoe5; 10-19-2008 at 01:22 AM. |
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#24
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Yes and my # was from 6 of October which last I checked occurred after 23 of September.
edit: Sorry, October 5th. But that's still after September 23rd. http://www.engadgethd.com/2008/10/11...nding-october/ Last edited by JoeD80; 10-19-2008 at 10:42 AM. |
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#25
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Plus, if they're not going to do that and BD players are backward compatible, there is no reason for B5 on BD.
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"I follow my own methods and tell as much or as little as I choose. That is the advantage of being unofficial." - Sherlock Holmes |
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#26
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Everything points to no blu-ray. Of course we can continue living in hope, but I like to keep my feet on the ground.
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#27
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I'm not actually sure I would want the CG to be upgraded. Part of what makes B5 what it is for me are the special effects (as they are). It would be like buying the movie Tron on Blu-ray and discovering that the computer generated parts had been upgraded and re-rendered in HD. I'd probably return it. |
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#28
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Kinda like the frog and the boiling water; if you toss a frog in boiling water, it will try to get out of the water. If you put the frog in cool water and then slowly bring it to a boil, the frog will remain in the water until it dies, because there never comes the moment when the delta is enough to trigger the escape impulse.
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I believe that when we leave a place, part of it goes with us and part of us remains. Go anywhere in the station, when it is quiet, and just listen. After a while, you will hear the echoes of all our conversations, every thought and word we've exchanged. Long after we are gone .. our voices will linger in these walls for as long as this place remains. But I will admit .. that the part of me that is going .. will very much miss the part of you that is staying. |
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#29
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Also check out Lemon Wolf's thread for some inspiration here
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#30
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The big problem I see here is not that the CGI would be worse than it is on DVD, clearly that wouldn't be the case, but precisely that it would be just the same. When you take all the filmed elements and put them into high definition, the CGI and composite scenes will jar and look worse precisely because they are not.
If I paint a crappy picture and put it up in a gallery next to a bundle of other crappy pictures, mine looks OK because it isn't out of place. If I put it in a gallery with a collection of fine art by talented painters it will look like what it is ... a piece of garbage. Same picture, different context, different interpretation. Hell, I remember people complaining that the composite scenes looked rubbish on DVD because of the combination of filmed elements and cropped CGI ... just imagine how those same fans would react to those composite scenes being bookended by superb, crisp HD scenes filmed in the Zocalo and C&C. Which brings us to the other issue. IIRC, the film stock of B5 was damaged in storage and the early seasons in particular were fairly noisy as a result ... something not entirely solved in making the DVDs. In that case, not only would the CGI have to be re-done from scratch because the original files are lost, but significant funds would need to be spent on repairing the fillm stock to prepare it for HD release. Without spending the significant sums for those two things to be done, hardcore fans of the show would probably be prepared to forgive and buy the set, because they know the background, others would not. The reviews of the set would likely be universally bad with regards to picture quality, and almost guarantees no sales among non-hardcore fans of the show. Personally, if WB ever decided to spend that kind of money on B5, I would prefer them to put it towards making something new. And comparison with the release of Firefly is a bit of a strawman, really. This is a cancelled show, but it is certainly not an OLD show. This was a series made when DVD was already the home video standard and Blu-Ray was on the way. Not only will Fox have made sure to retain the CGI so it could be re-rendered (or whatever the correct term is) into HD, but they may well have had a HD release in mind even when the show was made. That just isn't true for B5.
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