Tag Archives: Animation

Fantasia (1990 version)

Later versions of Fantasia (1940) are more accurate in terms of the ordering and amount of footage, which I like, but the 1990 version is perhaps the version I like best. This is what the New Beverly Cinema runs in 35mm, and I’ve been lucky to see it several times now, including this afternoon.

The negatives were manually cleaned and then photochemically copied. Without any computer processing, the 1990 version, on LD/VHS, is probably closest to what the film actually looks like, including grain, cel dust, and other beautiful flaws as a result of being made by hand under intense pressure. The 2000 version, on DVD, compares favorably, but Corey Burton replacing Deems Taylor’s voice is hard to swallow. I don’t understand why Disney, of all companies, didn’t hire a soundalike. After all, they did it for Bedknobs and Broomsticks (1971). The 2010 version, on BD, is de-grained, stabilized, cleaned, and de-flickered to death, in addition to being subjected to Disney’s terrible color grading. Avoid it.

The 2010 version smooths out what I consider the most thrilling part of the film: Ave Maria. In earlier versions, it flickers and shakes like crazy, giving the feeling that this whole audacious undertaking could fall apart at any frame, which, needing a fourth take and completed a day before premiering, it almost did. It’s a dreamy, breathtaking artifact of imperfection, but the ’10 de-flickered it away.

The ’90 also did the best censoring of Pastoral Symphony. Let’s face it, Disney is not going to show this uncut, so the quality of the censoring matters. The ’90 uses crops and pans. If you didn’t know it was censored, you wouldn’t know (and, indeed, I didn’t for the longest time). The ’00 crops more aggressively (it remains the largest grain I’ve ever seen), then goes further and erases Atika and Sunflower, reducing the frequency of cropping. The ’10 does more of the same, but in an unforgivable move, repeats a shot two seconds after it ran. When I watched the BD and saw this, I thought I lost my mind and had to stop the disc and check.

In one of their best series, all projected on film, LACMA (RIP) ran an incredible print of the ’00. That was nearly 25 years ago. I may still conclude that the ’90 is a better representation of Fantasia, but I would love to see this version in 35mm again.

Mobile Suit Gundam (1979, Right Stuf)

Grain Removal

De-grained by Q-Tec. The de-graining itself is kind of impressive. It leaves a significant amount of cel dust, film dirt, and doesn’t really destroy lines. In a way, it’s less destructive than many “faithful” restorations.

However, Q-Tec failed to de-grain every frame. For almost every shot, the first and last frames have intact grain. Shots begin with grain, but then melt into smeariness. It’s as if it constantly goes in and out of focus. Going from grain to no-grain also looks a lot like interpolation.

Continue reading

Cat City (Deaf Crocodile)

There’s typical frozen temporal cloning. The bigger problem is that there are about 100 freeze frames. Some have negligible clone repairs, but usually the picture simply freezes.

Frozen picture. Yellow number indicates frame number.
Picture is mostly frozen, with some misaligned cloning.

The shorts got worse processing, especially at splices.

Let Us Get a Dog (1974)

Freeze frame:

Interpolation:

Frozen cloning, screen tearing, misalignment:

Can you spot it?

Where is the Limit? (1975)

Frozen cloning:

Screen tearing:

Interpolation:

This interpolated frame includes a microloop.

Restoration processing by Hungary National Film Institute Filmlab.

Samm Deighan’s irritating uptalk-filled commentary approaches the movie with the assumption that animation is for children. It sounds like a dry book-report academic lecture, instead of someone who is an expert in Hungarian cinema. Skip it.

Benny’s Bathtub (Deaf Crocodile)

Deaf Crocodile’s BD of Benny’s Bathtub (1971) does not have a proper subtitle track, only closed captioning:

Typos:

Poor placement:

Additionally, the timing is poor. Lines appear too early, stay too long, and overlap dialog. All this makes following the movie very difficult.

The included episodes of Cirkleen suffer from the same subtitle problems.

Video quality, though, is very nice.

The Little Mermaid (1989)

Yesterday, the Academy Museum ran an original print of The Little Mermaid (1989). A very rare treat. I think the last time it ran in 35mm in Los Angeles was about 20 years ago at LACMA.

A few things struck me. It is VERY grainy and much of the movie has a haze over it, sometimes quite strong. Even the end credits—the blue lettering bloomed into the black.

Most surprising to me was that Ariel’s hair is red-orange, not red. It had been so long since I last saw the movie that I had come to think it was red.

There’s a nice comparison here, comparing the new UHD to the previous BD. In every instance, the UHD color is too saturated and seriously goosed. The BD more closely looks like the print I just saw. The colors were vibrant for the time, but duller than we’re used to seeing nowadays.