A poll idea from ZippyP.
I think B&W conveys more emotion. When they are stupid enough to colorize the classics I just turn the color off - no harm, no foul.
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I don't seem to hear as much about colorizing lately. Maybe it's fallen out of favor. It reminds me of cartoon color most of the time. I can't see that's it's any improvement.
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i think colorisation adds an interesting dimesion to old movies. It seems pretty well done. Would like to see more. Anyone have a list of old movies that have been colorised.
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I Recently saw a release of A Christmas Carol with Alastair Sims that had both the Old B & W and a Colorized version on the same DVD.
If anyone is interested Just do a search on Amazon.com it is the 1951 version.
Doing both on one disk makes it a no brainer to buy, family member that want color can waych in color and thos that want the original B & W can watch that version.
If they did that with all the releases, I include places like TCM, then great. My Brothers wife hated colorizing. Myself it didn't bother me. I believe that in many films it was only B & W because of budget limitations rather than artistic reasons, Excluding The Wizard of Oz. -
I wanna see _Clerks_ colorized.
Well not really, but I wouldn't mind it though.snappy phrase
I don't know what you're talking about. -
I hate colorization but I don't mind if they restore the film.
BTW...Ted Turner(TBS,TCM,etc) is a moron. -
I play all my DVDs thru an old 19 inch B&W tv. It makes eveything look like a classic : )
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Originally Posted by offline"Art is making something out of nothing and selling it." - Frank Zappa
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I LOVE the colorized movies when done well. The 1st two seasons of Bewitched look fantastic in color, and look just as good as the color episodes do. Early attempts to colorized films, such as Topper were dreadful, but the technology has really improved.
I can't understand why the big fuss over it, as cranking the color control to the left kills the color for those who don't want it.
Companies such as Legend films are offering all their colorized movies on a DVD with BOTH color and B/W versions. Both have been restored, so look great -
"Hate it. They're butchering the classics."
I love the look & feel of the old b/w classics. From the early horrors to the brilliant '50s Pommy crime/dramas... You can't beat it.
Black & white was a beautiful medium - there was loads more attention paid to lighting, shadow & texture etc.
Colourizing is unnecessary & a complete waste of time, IMO. Just more retarded antics from the creatively-bankrupt major studios... -
I'd like to correct a common misconception. Old classics were seldom intended to be viewed in stark B&W. The stars often wore colorful costumes and performed on colorful sets. The prints sent to big theaters in major cities were often tinted by hand with the colors of the original. The less exotic venues received sepia prints which had been chemically treated to make them easier on the eye. It was only audiences in the remote provincial theaters who had to tolerate "soot & whitewash" prints as they were commonly known.
Busby Berkeley is known to have experimented with color - not always successfully - and color stills from his B&W musicals are known to exist. He for one would probably be delighted with any attempt at colorization even if was not 100% convincing.
Likewise there is no such thing as a"silent movie". They were all accompanied by sound of some sort even if it was just an elderly spinster on a piano making it up as she went along.
BTW, CinemaScopre movies were seldom shown in widescreen but that's a whole different can of worms for the purists to lose sleep over. -
Likewise there is no such thing as a"silent movie". They were all accompanied by sound of some sort even if it was just an elderly spinster on a piano making it up as she went along.
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Originally Posted by ntscuser
Sure, they wore colourful costumes. I'm sure they weren't black & white costumes, amidst black & white sets. So what?
That's like saying, movies today are only in "colour", they don't portray the infra-red or ultra-violet... :P -
Wasn't colorization just a fad of the late 80's - early 90's? Are they actually still colorizing movies? I don't think I've seen one done since the mid 90's. I would imagine the technology now would be much better than it was back then. I've seen several out of curiousity. A couple didn't look too bad, but most were pretty poor. I usually ended up turning the color off. Either way, I don't think they should mess around with the classics. Movies, that is. Colorizing old black and white TV shows wouldn't bother me at all. I've never seen that done except for one short Honeymooners sketch colorized in 1987 (the first colorized thing I ever saw). I'd love to see Mr. Ed in living color.
I thought colorization was just an interesting "Look what we can do now!" type of thing, and that it had long since died out. -
Originally Posted by offline
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Originally Posted by Mawdryn
I have shown 16mm "hand tinted" versions of "The Great Train Robbery" (1904) and "Trip to the Moon" (1902) . Colorizing goes WAY WAY back.
I believe it it best to see films the way they were originally intended.
To do anything else, (colorizing, pan & scan etc.) destroys the original
intent and concept.
mikel -
ntscuser and offline, you're both part right and part wrong...
The majority of movies from the silent era were shot and mastered without a soundtrack, yet the producer's distributed sheet music intended to be played by pianists and organists at the movie theatres (since many of them were re-converted stage theatres that already had pianos/organs). Not ALL, not NONE. The "honky-tonk" soundtrack is a stereotype BECAUSE that's the way some theatre pianists (with bad pianos) decided to interpret the music (particularly in undercranked/sped-up motion scenes) and it stuck in peoples' minds.
If you've ever scene a copy of the restored hand-tinted version (with blood red!) of the silent Phantom of the Opera, accompanied by a great pipe organ and organist, you're in for a hair-raising experience!
re:Colorization
The quality has increased dramatically in the last 2 decades. Of particular interest is a paper from a couple of years ago by a research team that has devised a way for the computer to "fill-in-the-blanks" and assist with rapid finishing of colorizing scenes.
Is it worth it? In moderation, when done on projects where the original producer/director did not specifically INTEND to emphasize the Black and White medium, and when done with painstaking skill and attention to detail. And, as long as the original BW material is restored and still available for distribution and viewing, I think it could be a good thing. It's just that there have been some notoriously BAD examples (more when it wasn't quite "ready for prime time") that have soured peoples appreciation of it.
But it can be done well--I saw "Adam's Rib" a few years ago. It would be, say, a 5 on a 0-10 touchup quality scale, where newer processes might get a 7 or maybe even 8. I was ~1/3 of the way through the movie before my doubts as to the originality of the color were confirmable.
Scott -
The GameBoy Advance colorizes old B&W GameBoy games.
Also the SuperGameBoy did this on the SNES too.
Some movies were made in B&W because of budget constraints (i. e. _Clerks_)
Some movies were made in B&W for artistic reasons (i. e. Hitchcock's _Psycho_)
I thought that _The Wizard of Oz_ fell into the second category, but someone else has made a claim in this thread that the opposite is true.snappy phrase
I don't know what you're talking about. -
The Wizard of Oz was deliberately made in B&W for the first part based in Kansas and then shot on colour film for the part in Oz.
The whole B&W to colour to B&W was intended. -
Wizard of OZ!
Now there is a movie you DON'T want to colorize under any circumstances. Another one is the Italian film, "We All Loved Each Other So Much". Great transition scene!!
For those who want to know what GOOD colorization can do these days, it might interest you that the movie "Pleasantville" was shot in color, stripped of all it's color, and then re-colorized/tinted for the shots when the color elements get "introduced" into the scene (intended/done by the producer of course).
If I were teaching on the contrast between the Black-and-White vs. Color gestalts, I'd show these 3 together. All great films.
Scott -
To me, if a movie is so old that is is in B/W, then I probably don't want to watch it....but if I must I say just leave it B/W
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Originally Posted by tgpo
If I remember correctly you are a Stanley Kubrick fan, yes? Paths of Glory and Dr. Strangelove, two very good B&W films by him.
Side Note: My personal favourite movie of all time is B&W...the Maltese Falcon."Art is making something out of nothing and selling it." - Frank Zappa -
Originally Posted by tgpo
google "black and white movies" and your 1st hit is an Amazon list of 25 great B/W films. I've seen them all. They're all great. What about the Marx Bros?? (note my avatar)
Other more recent B/W films not on that list...
Day the Earth Stood Still
Beatles: Hard Day's Night
Night of the Living Dead
Manhatten
Shadows and Fog
Clerks
Ed Wood
Good Night and Good Luck
(mostly B/W) Rumblefish
(mostly B/W) SinCity
(mostly B/W) Nosferatu (1979)
Similar things could be said of silent movies. There's still good, engaging storytelling in them.
Scott -
I have "its a wonderful life" - James Stewart , colorised version on videotape and I think its pretty good. The dvd release was only the b/w version. Pity they didn't include both versions.
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Add the original KING KONG & CASABLANCA to the great B&W list.
or even Capt Blood or Citizen Kane.
There was a lot more attention to textures and shadows in hem days.
A note: The first reel (and the end) of Wizard of Oz was NOT filmed in B&W.
It was filmed in Technicolor but in a sepia tone. -
Originally Posted by doppletwo
" believe that in many films it was only B & W because of budget limitations rather than artistic reasons, Excluding The Wizard of Oz."
The phrase "excluding the Wizard of Oz" was intended to convey that it was done for artistic reasons rather than Budget constraints.
TBoneit -
Originally Posted by Cornucopia
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Here's the story on Pleasantville. Originally, they shot in color with the intention of selectively "subtracting" the chroma from the scenes where B/W was needed. Then in post, they realized that they could have more control, and get more striking color contrasts, if they lost all the color and tinted what they wanted for color. There's a great article about it that appeared in one of the industry mags a couple of years back when it came out (millimeter, videographer, post, etc).
You're right about B/W film latitude & grain, though.
Scott
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