BD 257 The Great Silence
- FrauBlucher
- Joined: Mon Jul 15, 2013 8:28 pm
- Location: Greenwich Village
- Finch
- Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2008 5:09 pm
- Location: Edinburgh, UK
Re: BD 257 The Great Silence
It's disappointing that Gary makes no mention of the crushed blacks and the dodgy compression. The MoC may be the best release of the film yet but it might take a UHD to get an ideal presentation.
- Drucker
- Your Future our Drucker
- Joined: Wed May 18, 2011 9:37 am
Re: BD 257 The Great Silence
Out of stock on Eureka's website, presumably sold out or nearly sold out of copies with the slipcase. As of my typing Amazon UK lists 14 copies in stock.
- TMDaines
- Joined: Wed Nov 11, 2009 1:01 pm
- Location: Stretford, Manchester
Re: BD 257 The Great Silence
Eureka's dicking around with limited editions consisting solely of a slipcase is starting to get annoying.
- 4LOM
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 9:10 pm
- Location: Rheda-Wiedenbrueck / Germany
- Contact:
Re: BD 257 The Great Silence
This one also includes a poster and 4 lobby cards.TMDaines wrote:Eureka's dicking around with limited editions consisting solely of a slipcase is starting to get annoying.
- vsski
- Joined: Thu Oct 13, 2011 3:47 pm
Re: BD 257 The Great Silence
Despite the reviews of blacks being crushed and compression issues, I did cave in and bought the MOC when it went out of print on the Eureka website (and ironically now have two copies as I ordered from two retailers thinking that one likely was also sold out and hadn’t updated their site).
Well, unfortunately I can report that reviews stating compression issues and black crushing are true and the disc is definitely not the reference quality it could have been. Of course it’s way better than the previous US DVD that I have and grain is rendered mostly well. In general the film does have a grimy, hazy look to it and quite a few scenes are filmed with filters and gauze which is noticeable. While black crushing is visible in the night and interior scenes (although it varies by scene), what I found the most distressing is the compression that sometimes makes some images look very digital and not just in black areas. Fortunately the majority of the film looks fine, so if you don’t own it already (and don’t have to have the limited edition) I’d wait for a sale from Eureka down the line.
Since a 4K restoration was presumably done, it stands to hope that a UHD will materialize that may rectify the problems. Clearly a missed opportunity, as the package with all the extras is superb.
Well, unfortunately I can report that reviews stating compression issues and black crushing are true and the disc is definitely not the reference quality it could have been. Of course it’s way better than the previous US DVD that I have and grain is rendered mostly well. In general the film does have a grimy, hazy look to it and quite a few scenes are filmed with filters and gauze which is noticeable. While black crushing is visible in the night and interior scenes (although it varies by scene), what I found the most distressing is the compression that sometimes makes some images look very digital and not just in black areas. Fortunately the majority of the film looks fine, so if you don’t own it already (and don’t have to have the limited edition) I’d wait for a sale from Eureka down the line.
Since a 4K restoration was presumably done, it stands to hope that a UHD will materialize that may rectify the problems. Clearly a missed opportunity, as the package with all the extras is superb.
- ChunkyLover
- Joined: Sun Jul 19, 2020 8:22 pm
Re: BD 257 The Great Silence
I tried watching the Eureka disc and, personally, I found it borderline unwatchable. Besides the black crush, I'm not a fan of how all the colors are "deeper"/more saturated compared to Film Movement. Interestingly, the film footage used in the Austin Fisher interview looks much more like the FM disc and Eureka's YouTube trailer also looks the same (both without the slightly lower gamma FM has and the framing isn't slightly zoomed like the Eureka disc). It's a shame the final encode/export was botched. Until an English friendly 4K comes along, I'll just stick with the Film Movement disc (which really isn't that bad in-motion and adjusting the gamma to 2.4 does combat some of the washed out look).