Re: Planning naphta HD/UHD 2021
Publié : 29 juil. 21, 11:51
Pour moi ce sera l"édition simple ..https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09B8FXZ8N/?c ... g_dp_it_im
Pour moi ce sera l"édition simple ..https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09B8FXZ8N/?c ... g_dp_it_im
C'est Warner Video donc, en principe, oui. Puis, si tu jette un œil sur les spécificités techniques de l'édition américaine (que j'ai posté juste avant ton message), il y a le doublage et les sous-titres en français qui sont indiqués. Je pense que c'est du parisien, qui plus est... À confirmer.
Tout le catalogue HD de Flicker Alley me fait de l'œil, c'est du très joli travail et en plus c'est du boîtier Scanavo, mais que ça coûte cher… Ce n'est jamais bradé, on tourne toujours dans les 30-40 balles hors frais de port. Fut un temps, on en trouvait parfois autour de 20€ tout compris chez les revendeurs internationaux (grossistes type rarewaves etc.) mais cette époque est malheureusement révolue.
Bonus :
Jacques Doniol-Valcroze, les cahiers d’un cinéaste (58 min) - Documentaire de Nicole Berckmans avec la participation de Costa-Gavras, Jean-Luc Godard et Jean-Louis Trintignant.
Fenêtre sur court : Un adieu (24 min) - Court métrage de Mathilde Profit
The Sheik restoration employed modern technology so viewers can experience the original beauty of this monumental silent film. Since original negatives for silent films rarely exist, Paramount searched the world for the best elements and used a print and an intermediate element called a fine grain. One source of the film yielded better results for image quality, another for intertitles. One of the elements was "stretch-printed" and had to be adjusted digitally during the restoration process. In the silent era there was no standard frame rate, so stretch printing was done to show silent films at 24 frames per second. In addition, tints and tones were digitally applied, guided by an original continuity script from the Paramount archive. The result is the best picture quality The Sheik has had since it was originally shown in theaters 100 years ago. While The Sheik was wildly successful, it did provoke controversy, much as the source material had upon its original publication in 1919. Many of the themes and controversial elements of the film are still being grappled with today, a subject that is explored in a new featurette on the Blu-ray with film historian and professor Leslie Midkiff DeBauche entitled "Desert Heat: 100 Years with The Sheik." The disc also includes a music score by Roger Bellon and access to a Digital copy of the film.