Re: Pre-2000s Television on Bluray
Posted: Thu May 15, 2014 7:54 pm
No - they were supervised by Lynch at 1.33.
I did hear something about CBS doing tests for this in widescreen, but it was probably just forum talk. Surely Lynch would not allow it (it's not like this was a Super35 show)?Zot! wrote:I don't have to worry about them cropping to widescreen, do I?
Yeah, they did. I went into the series fairly blind, and didn't realize until somewhere around episode 13 or 14 that I had transitioned into the second season.zedz wrote:Interesting that they've obscured the difference between Seasons One and Two, and just numbered every episode in order. Did they do the same with the Gold Box?
Damn. If I'm not reading too much into that, sounds like the deleted scene presentation might end with some new footage, which Lynch had been rumored (and debunked, and then rumored again) to be shooting. Also, "feature-length experience" sounds like it could be something a bit more than just a series of cut scenes, no?This feature-length experience has been directed and edited by Lynch exclusively for this release. Capping off more than 30 deleted/alternate scenes is an epilogue providing a fascinating glimpse beyond the cliffhanger finale of the TV series.
You say this like it's a bad thing.pzadvance wrote:Also, "feature-length experience" sounds like it could be something a bit more than just a series of cut scenes, no?
I would assume that this is just the Annie in the hospital scene and Cooper on the bathroom floor.pzadvance wrote:Damn. If I'm not reading too much into that, sounds like the deleted scene presentation might end with some new footage, which Lynch had been rumored (and debunked, and then rumored again) to be shooting. Also, "feature-length experience" sounds like it could be something a bit more than just a series of cut scenes, no?This feature-length experience has been directed and edited by Lynch exclusively for this release. Capping off more than 30 deleted/alternate scenes is an epilogue providing a fascinating glimpse beyond the cliffhanger finale of the TV series.
The cut scenes are incredible to have in any form, of course, but it'd be even more interesting to have them presented in a Lynch-constructed piece, something akin to what PTA did with the extra footage on The Master blu-ray.mteller wrote:You say this like it's a bad thing.pzadvance wrote:Also, "feature-length experience" sounds like it could be something a bit more than just a series of cut scenes, no?
Not really. It says right on the DVDs which are Season 1 or Season 2, although they use a continuous system of numbering the episodes.jindianajonz wrote:Yeah, they did. I went into the series fairly blind, and didn't realize until somewhere around episode 13 or 14 that I had transitioned into the second season.zedz wrote:Interesting that they've obscured the difference between Seasons One and Two, and just numbered every episode in order. Did they do the same with the Gold Box?
It sounds as if it is going to be in the same vein as the "More Things That Happened" 75 minute compilation of deleted scenes on the US disc of Inland Empire. Which I'm actually excited about as I kind of liked "More Things That Happened" even more than I did Inland Empire, and felt that Lynch really came into his own when unconstrained by any need to form a kind of narrative throughline and instead recontextualise deleted scenes into something else entirely.pzadvance wrote:The cut scenes are incredible to have in any form, of course, but it'd be even more interesting to have them presented in a Lynch-constructed piece, something akin to what PTA did with the extra footage on The Master blu-ray.mteller wrote:You say this like it's a bad thing.pzadvance wrote:Also, "feature-length experience" sounds like it could be something a bit more than just a series of cut scenes, no?
If you've read what they had planned for the end of Season 2 before Lynch came on board, you'd know that whatever was planned by them for Season 3 would've driven it even further away from the great show it was.Finch wrote:The epilogue quoted in the press release is likely to refer to the post-Black Lodge scenes that Lynch and Engels wrote into the FWWM script (edit: what John Cope said).
What I haven't seen mentioned on this forum before is that Engels told an interviewer that Harley Peyton had what Engels considered the best idea for a third season had ABC renewed the show back then: the first 20 mins of the season three opener would have resolved all cliffhangers from season two, then they'd have gone to the commercial break, then the episode would have continued with a brief black screen, then the caption 25 years later. Obviously in practice this would work much better if they did this now but Lynch has ruled out a third season.
Odd, the MSRP has now dropped to $129.99. $90.99 with the 30% discount. Wonder why it'd drop if it's dropping to yet another inaccurate figure?wattsup32 wrote:Interesting that the official announcement lists the MSRP at $109.99 in the U.S., but Amazon lists it at $134.99. One of these must be wrong. Hopefully, it's Amazon.