Laser Disk owners sound off (bag strap discussion)
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Laser Disk owners sound off (bag strap discussion)
Who's got Raiders on Laser Disk and can they do screen captures from it?
I'd like to compair DVD detail vs. Laserdisk and see if there was a loss of detail from LD to DVD. (such as being able to see grooves in the bag strap on LD where on DVD you really can't tell positively) I can give you a few scenes to check if anyone is able. (or you can do your own research if you want)
I'd like to compair DVD detail vs. Laserdisk and see if there was a loss of detail from LD to DVD. (such as being able to see grooves in the bag strap on LD where on DVD you really can't tell positively) I can give you a few scenes to check if anyone is able. (or you can do your own research if you want)
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I have the trilogy on laser disc and on dvd. I can not, however, do screen grabs.
While the resolution of laser disc and dvd are very comparable, Lowry Digital Images cleaned up over 970,000 frames for the dvd release of Raiders. The laser disc release was several years before the dvd release, and while the print may have been in better shape at that time, I do not recall such a massive restoration being done prior to the laser disc release.
I understand that you are trying to get a better look at the strap to answer some gear questions, but I really think that the dvd version is going to be the best version of Raiders that we have available. Granted, this is my opinion before doing a side by side comparison of the two.
While the resolution of laser disc and dvd are very comparable, Lowry Digital Images cleaned up over 970,000 frames for the dvd release of Raiders. The laser disc release was several years before the dvd release, and while the print may have been in better shape at that time, I do not recall such a massive restoration being done prior to the laser disc release.
I understand that you are trying to get a better look at the strap to answer some gear questions, but I really think that the dvd version is going to be the best version of Raiders that we have available. Granted, this is my opinion before doing a side by side comparison of the two.
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I know what laser discs are , I never liked them cause of there size and cause you had to flip them over in the middle of a movie, so I had no problem watching Indy on VHS,besides I mainly bought the DVD set for the extras.Bufflehead Jones wrote:If you knew the answer to that question, you would have been watching dvd quality video in your home back in 1980 instead of having to wait for them to invent dvd in the late 1990's. Two additional decades of home theater bliss.Indiana Williams wrote:Whats a Laser Disc?
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Joe,
I was in a video store in the early 1990's browsing through the laser discs and a couple walked in and the guy immediately said, "look honey, they have all these movie soundtracks on records".
With the size of display devices today, the resolution of vhs is totally inadequate. On a really large display, watching vhs is almost painful. I like the term coined by director James Cameron, crapvision vhs. He doesn't leave any doubt what he thinks of the format.
I was in a video store in the early 1990's browsing through the laser discs and a couple walked in and the guy immediately said, "look honey, they have all these movie soundtracks on records".
With the size of display devices today, the resolution of vhs is totally inadequate. On a really large display, watching vhs is almost painful. I like the term coined by director James Cameron, crapvision vhs. He doesn't leave any doubt what he thinks of the format.
I have the Raiders laser and it was the first test disc (1992, I believe) that LFL did in THX. I think the sound on my laserdisc is FAR superior of that on the dvd. I hear that only if you have top quality components are you able to distinguish a real difference in picture quality. My laser looks plenty good to me, honestly.
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A progresive scan dvd player will look better, but otherwise they are pretty close.Dre wrote:is laserdisc actually as good as dvd quality? i never really looked into it but always assumed dvd was better.
The first laser disc released in dolby digital sound was Clear and Present Danger in 1995.
The first THX certified laser disc was James Cameron's The Abyss in 1993.
Unfortunately, the 1992 laser disc release of Raiders was neither.
I've read in the past and also seen on several ebay auctions over the past 10 years that the Raiders laserdisc release was released in THX, although not labeled as so. You did say The Abyss was the first 'certified' THX release which technically COULD make Raiders the first 'uncertified' release. It is certainly possible that is was a test for The Abyss. Perhaps they were fooling around with Raiders to test out the sound production and just went ahead with the whole film.The first THX certified laser disc was James Cameron's The Abyss in 1993.
Unfortunately, the 1992 laser disc release of Raiders was neither.
You can see a slightly better quility in picture on the dvd, but it's not much. The sound is a different thing though. I played my laser for Minnesota and his wife when they were over and they agreed there was a major difference. The laser has a much more full sound, not as forced as the dvd.
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THX as it applies to laser disc and dvd is a certfication program only. It simply means that THX has certified that the production of that release was done to a certain set of specifications developed by THX. Other engineers are perfectly capable of producing outstanding movie releases with out being supervised by THX. It was simply an effort to help standardize the industry.agent5 wrote:I've read in the past and also seen on several ebay auctions over the past 10 years that the Raiders laserdisc release was released in THX, although not labeled as so. You did say The Abyss was the first 'certified' THX release which technically COULD make Raiders the first 'uncertified' release. It is certainly possible that is was a test for The Abyss. Perhaps they were fooling around with Raiders to test out the sound production and just went ahead with the whole film.The first THX certified laser disc was James Cameron's The Abyss in 1993.
Unfortunately, the 1992 laser disc release of Raiders was neither.
You can see a slightly better quility in picture on the dvd, but it's not much. The sound is a different thing though. I played my laser for Minnesota and his wife when they were over and they agreed there was a major difference. The laser has a much more full sound, not as forced as the dvd.
THX is not a "TYPE" of movie sound. Dolby Digital is a type of movie sound. The 1992 laser disc release of Raiders was a matrixed surround soundtrack. This means that the original five tracks of the dolby soundtrack of the film was "matrixed" or combined into a two channel stereo track.
This stereo track is then decoded into five channels by a decoder in your home gear upon playback. There is inherently blead over so to speak, between channels during this encoding and decoding process.
Dolby Digital sound is a discrete digital format. It has 5.1 channels of discrete digital sound. It contains five full range channels and one Low Frequency Effects Channel, thus the 5.1 designation.
Discrete digital sound means that the sound is in digital form and each channel is kept completely separate throughout the entire mixing and mastering process and is recorded completely separate on your disc. The channels are separate all through the chain and are never mixed together.
The Raiders dvd was in discrete digital sound and was technically far superior to the matrixed surround track of the laser disc release. If when comparing the two soundtracks, the sound levels were not precisely calibrated, this could account for someone mistakenly preferring the inferior soundtrack.
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While I am on the subject of THX....
In the beginning, THX was an attempt to standardize the sound in commercial movie theaters which at the time was usually pretty horrible. It set a standard for commercial movie theaters as far as things like the slope of the floor, how much background noise was allowed to blead over from the adjacent movie theater, how loud the air conditioning could be inside the theater, the total allowable background noise, etc. It was an effort to standardize all theaters that were certified by THX so that it would sound the same anywhere you went to see a movie if you went to a THX certified theater.
Even then, theaters that were THX certified had to pay Lucasfilm a licensing fee. With the advent of home theater, THX certification spead to the home. At first it was helpful in assuring that all of the components that you bought would work well together.
It always provided a THX reference level that helped you to calibrate your speaker levels with a sound pressure level meter. It was not necessary, but it was convenient.
Today this is almost not needed at all, as even some of the cheapest Japanese receivers come with a microphone that the receiver uses and sends out a test signal and listens to the test signal on this microphone and then adjusts itself to the acoustics of the room it is in.
THX then began to certify laser disc releases and then dvd releases. The studio that produced the movies had to pay a licensing fee to have their releases THX certified.
THX now certifies just about anything as it has become a marketing ploy that has generated a lot of money for Lucasfilm. I am eagerly awaiting the announcement that THX has certified a certain brand of popcorn as the best popcorn to eat while watching a movie. Don't laugh, if a popcorn company wanted to pay the licensing fee, THX would certify it. The best thing about THX today, is the cool sounding trailers that they put on the beginning of a THX certified movie.
In the home theater gear, at first there was just one THX certification. As Lucasfilm began to get greedier, they decided to offer two levels of THX certification. What used to be known as simply THX certified, now became known as THX Ultra. And all of the components that were not able to pass the previous THX standards, but the company really wanted to pay Lucasfilm, could now have their gear certified as THX Select.
It was kind of like the USDA certifying beef as either USDA Prime or USDA Select. THX Select basicly means that THX certifies that the gear you bought is not as good as the gear that the guy bought that says THX Ultra on it. Like I really need them to tell me that?
What does all of this talk of THX have to do with Indygear? It just shows that Lucas has accumulated enough money from these licensing fees that he could afford to go ahead and get Indy IV into production and make it a super whombat of a great movie.
In the beginning, THX was an attempt to standardize the sound in commercial movie theaters which at the time was usually pretty horrible. It set a standard for commercial movie theaters as far as things like the slope of the floor, how much background noise was allowed to blead over from the adjacent movie theater, how loud the air conditioning could be inside the theater, the total allowable background noise, etc. It was an effort to standardize all theaters that were certified by THX so that it would sound the same anywhere you went to see a movie if you went to a THX certified theater.
Even then, theaters that were THX certified had to pay Lucasfilm a licensing fee. With the advent of home theater, THX certification spead to the home. At first it was helpful in assuring that all of the components that you bought would work well together.
It always provided a THX reference level that helped you to calibrate your speaker levels with a sound pressure level meter. It was not necessary, but it was convenient.
Today this is almost not needed at all, as even some of the cheapest Japanese receivers come with a microphone that the receiver uses and sends out a test signal and listens to the test signal on this microphone and then adjusts itself to the acoustics of the room it is in.
THX then began to certify laser disc releases and then dvd releases. The studio that produced the movies had to pay a licensing fee to have their releases THX certified.
THX now certifies just about anything as it has become a marketing ploy that has generated a lot of money for Lucasfilm. I am eagerly awaiting the announcement that THX has certified a certain brand of popcorn as the best popcorn to eat while watching a movie. Don't laugh, if a popcorn company wanted to pay the licensing fee, THX would certify it. The best thing about THX today, is the cool sounding trailers that they put on the beginning of a THX certified movie.
In the home theater gear, at first there was just one THX certification. As Lucasfilm began to get greedier, they decided to offer two levels of THX certification. What used to be known as simply THX certified, now became known as THX Ultra. And all of the components that were not able to pass the previous THX standards, but the company really wanted to pay Lucasfilm, could now have their gear certified as THX Select.
It was kind of like the USDA certifying beef as either USDA Prime or USDA Select. THX Select basicly means that THX certifies that the gear you bought is not as good as the gear that the guy bought that says THX Ultra on it. Like I really need them to tell me that?
What does all of this talk of THX have to do with Indygear? It just shows that Lucas has accumulated enough money from these licensing fees that he could afford to go ahead and get Indy IV into production and make it a super whombat of a great movie.
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Dre,Dre wrote:is laserdisc actually as good as dvd quality? i never really looked into it but always assumed dvd was better.
To give you a better answer, yes, laser disc is a very high quality video format. It is fairly equal to dvd. However, it is an older technology that is almost a dead format today. It is almost impossible to find any store that would still sell a laser disc. There is currently only one company that even still makes a laser disc player and that is Pioneer. As far as I know, they haven't stopped production, yet.
In it's day it was the best video avalable to early odopters of home theater. It provided me with two decades of high quality video and sound in my home that the majority of people are only now realizing due to affordable surround sound and dvd.
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Ive only seen a few movies on laser disc, i use to prefer stereo to 5.1 until I watched the Indy movies at my unlce's house, who has a 60in Ultravision TV and a Bose system.so now i looking around for a good 5.1 system for my 27in RCA.erri_wan wrote:Is it normal that i never saw a laserdisk but only heard about them?
about the audio format... i still prefer Stereo sound instead of 5.1
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I occasionally find laser disc's in antique stores when my wife and I are prowling the backroads of Tennessee. I actually found a copy of Last Crusade in a pile of discs, and the majority of the discs were 5 to 10 dollars. They wanted $50 for the dang thing!
Needless to say, it's still in the box at the store. I even have a VERY nice new in the box player at the house, and very few discs to play on it.
Regards! Michaelson
Needless to say, it's still in the box at the store. I even have a VERY nice new in the box player at the house, and very few discs to play on it.
Regards! Michaelson
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Finally remember to get some times for you to check.Bufflehead Jones wrote:IndyDoc, Good point. If you have the running time on dvd of a couple spots that you would like to check, I'll do an A/B test to look and see if I can notice a difference.
6m:28s
6:33
7:26-27
1:18:13
1:18:23-24
All are looking for grooves in the bag strap. The last one at 1:18:24 frame 1 (flying wing fight) is a pretty clear groove even on the DVD. You can frame by frame around those areas also to find the clearest shots (when the strap stops moving). There's also some good spots in the Cairo fight and chase, but I didn't list them as there's enogh above.
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I LEARNED on most of that equipment. Boy, those reel to reel video recorders were a bear to work, especially with the lousy single tube cameras we had in the day. You had to have a TON of light to light up a scene, and still only got a grainy black and white picture. Sometimes the 'good old days' are not worth revisiting!
High regards!~ Michaelson
High regards!~ Michaelson
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After fiddling with my editing soft and graphics soft I cannot find any proof for grooves on the leather strap here are a few screenshots - inverted to show any anomolies in the strap but as you can see there is no shadow or clearly identified groove structure on any. I have also played around with filtering etc t no avail the grooves just aren't there on these shots.
regards,
regards,
Last edited by Harrison_Davies on Sat Oct 01, 2005 1:52 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Well from that clear picture we can see that there are no grooves but we should also keep in mind that a lot of times Harrison Ford used to carry the bag reversed. In that case the grooves wouldnt be visible.Harrison_Davies wrote:the tent scene as he grabs marion....
Could you confirm what side is the bag carried in that scene?
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Did you see my post above with times to look at in it? (for Bufflehead to check on LD but you can use them on DVD too) Check the ones that are of the flying wing fight. Those are the clearest shot of grooves I have found. Many of the others (some that you have shown) are iffy whether they are there or are just a shadow of the cupped edge.
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I saw a lot of ifs and maybes but nothing I felt was evidence enough. In particular there was a couple of shots in the opening temple scene, the one that sticks out to me was when Ford gives the line "stay out of the light". There were some others also at about the same camera distance where there appears there could be some shallow groves rathar close to the edges. Unfortunately most of the close up shots appear to show the opposite. The scene in the tent where he grabs Marion does appear to be the best shot of the strap and pretty clearly shows no grooves, but to me it looks like the back face of the strap. I think the second best shot of it could be when they are taking cover after emerging from the well of souls but before the flying wing fight. Again, there doesn't appear to really be any grooves. All this makes me wonder where the info came from that the strap had grooves in the first place.
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With HDs own teqnique and screen grab. Looks like theres a line going all the way down the right side and something on the left. I think this is one of the exact frames I was refering to when I was talking about the flying wing fight.
In his "beging for money" grab above, the inverted version looks like there's a line too.
I'll try to get more if I have time.
BTW, the point of this thread was to compair the DVD to LD versions and see if there was any more detail in the LD that the digital "cleaning" of the DVD erased, not to find or disprove grooves. It was just a detail that I think has possibly gotten removed as a "scratch". I have a thread on my theory some where and it's explained in this one too. I have another lost detail in the other thread though. But we can continue that if you like (or start a new thread about it).
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