Monday’s “Superbowl spectactular” news

Doctor Who

Awards

Film

US TV

Monday’s “YA Aaron Sorkin TV TV show” news

Awards

Film

Theatre

British TV

US TV

DVD and Blu-Ray reviews

Review: Philips BDP3000 Blu-Ray player

Philips BDP3000

This isn’t so much a review as an “artist’s impression” first look at the Philips BDP3000 Blu-Ray player. Because let’s face it, if it

  1. Plays Blu-Ray discs
  2. Plays all your old DVDs as well

That’s pretty much all you need from it, so I don’t really need to go into the fine details too much. And there’s a decent review on TechRadar anyway, if you need some tech specs, et al.

But I will point out a few caveats with this new high tech world we live in.

Continue reading “Review: Philips BDP3000 Blu-Ray player”

US TV

Question of the week: how faithful should DVDs be to the original content?

The Terminator

So I’m watching the DVD version of The Terminator the other day for pretty much the first time (long story). Now The Terminator is a film I know very well, having watched it about 50 times or something ridiculous when I was at university when I had it on VHS. So as I’m watching it, I’m noticing that certain things aren’t the same. Little things. Least obviously, they’ve changed the gun sound effects and they’ve added in little clangs whenever bullets hit the Terminator.

DVDs being the clever technology they are, they’re also multi-lingual – they can have different subtitles and different audio tracks. That means a film studio can sell its DVD all over Europe, say, and not have to produce physically different DVDs for each market. But obviously if you’re watching your DVD France, you don’t want English text all over the screen, even if the original movie had that text for subtitles or even simple plot-explaining cards. So you take out the on-screen subtitles or card and stick them into a subtitle track on the DVD to be rendered by the DVD player in whatever language the viewer wants.

As a result, egregiously the DVD of The Terminator doesn’t have that famous title card with

“LOS ANGELES 2029 A.D.

THE MACHINES ROSE FROM THE ASHES OF THE NUCLEAR FIRE.

THEIR WAR TO EXTERMINATE MANKIND HAS RAGED FOR DECADES,

BUT THE FINAL BATTLE WOULD NOT BE FOUGHT IN THE FUTURE.

IT WOULD BE FOUGHT HERE, IN OUR PRESENT.

[BRIEF PAUSE] TONIGHT…”

Instead, it has a series of subtitles containing that text over the previous scene. Not even over a black screen – over the previous scene.

Ugh. That ruins it.

The Terminator isn’t alone of course. Many DVDs are different from the movie or TV series in subtly different ways. WKRP in Cincinnati had to have a completely different soundtrack when it was eventually cleared for DVD release, since licensing the songs used on the TV version proved prohibitively expensive. Iron Man doesn’t even have all the subtitles that were shown in the English theatrical version.

So today’s slightly nerdy, pedantic question is:

Should DVDs be entirely faithful to the original medium or is “nearly the same” good enough?

As always, leave a comment with your answer or a link to your answer on your own blog

Film reviews

Review: SALT (2010)

Angelina Jolie in Salt

Salt - extended edition pack shotStarring: Angelina Jolie, Liev Schreiber and Chiwetel Ejiofor
Writers: Kurt Wimmer.
Director: Phillip Noyce
Price: £19.99 (Amazon price: £9.99)
Released: December 13th 2010

Jean-Luc Godard famously said that “All you need to make a movie is a gun and a girl”. Of course, he meant a guy carrying a gun and a girl for him to be with, but times have moved on and thankfully, these days it’s frequently the girls/women who have the guns – and maybe a guy to be with as well.

Now SALT sees CIA agent Angelina Jolie – one of the movies’ most proficient women/girls with guns – accused of being a Russian sleeper agent and having to go on the run (with a gun). So you might suspect it’s nothing more than that formula. However, while you might have low expectations from the trailer and SALT does frequently fall off the narrow line between silly and good into silly on many occasions, it is a lot more than just that formula – in essence, it’s The Bourne Identity but on US soil and with a female lead. That can’t be bad, can it?

Review after the trailer and the jump.

Continue reading “Review: SALT (2010)”