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Post by Mark Vanderlinde-Abernathy on Apr 17, 2014 11:53:50 GMT
Enemy went up on to iTunes with VidFire applied, Web did not. I am to understand that iTunes negates most of the vidfire effect, but you probably noticed the subtle difference anyway.
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Post by simonashby on Apr 17, 2014 13:37:29 GMT
Oh no, I should have made myself clearer. By 'choppy' I meant film jitter and instability.
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Post by richardwoods on Apr 17, 2014 14:29:18 GMT
Web ran fine for us on Apple TV. The quality was excellent, certainly no jitter, etc.
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Post by Steven Christopherson on Apr 18, 2014 3:56:39 GMT
Web looked fine to me too, through iTunes Australia last year.
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Post by simonashby on Apr 18, 2014 10:25:13 GMT
Hmm. There's a definite drop in quality as far as I can see.
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Post by D. Frame on Apr 28, 2014 11:13:10 GMT
The film sequences on my Web DVD do look less sharp than the studio bits. I know there's a noticeable difference between video and film anyway but there was obvious ghosting around moving figures when I watched it last night. That slight double image when people move.
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Post by richardwoods on Apr 28, 2014 12:56:55 GMT
The film sequences on my Web DVD do look less sharp than the studio bits. I know there's a noticeable difference between video and film anyway but there was obvious ghosting around moving figures when I watched it last night. That slight double image when people move. Interesting, have only watched the Apple TV version off iTunes so far which was excellent quality. Will have to have a look at the DVD.
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Post by Steven Christopherson on Apr 28, 2014 13:29:57 GMT
It's not just the sharpness cranked up on your player that's causing the ghosting on the DVD is it?
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Post by D. Frame on Apr 29, 2014 6:48:05 GMT
It's not just the sharpness cranked up on your player that's causing the ghosting on the DVD is it? I was wondering I had to watch it in the Blu-ray player and that can have some odd effects on some DVDs. I lent my usual DVD player to someone so I'll have to wait till I get it back to check. It didn't stand out so much on previous watches, it would have driven me mad before now. I must compare episode 1 to the Lost In Time version.
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Post by Shane Anderson on May 1, 2014 2:02:04 GMT
The DVD version of Web (which finally came out in Region 1) has considerably better picture quality than the ITunes version. It looks really good. I'm delighted to be able to have it with all the other DVDs on my shelf, a story I never thought I'd see.
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Post by George D on May 1, 2014 22:46:31 GMT
It's a shame abominable snowman wasn't on the shelf also, but it's really great to see how good season 5 is now looking
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Post by Vaughan Stanger on May 2, 2014 8:48:39 GMT
It's a shame abominable snowman wasn't on the shelf also, but it's really great to see how good season 5 is now looking Too right! If I think back to how S5 looked when I first heard about missing episodes (1986, in my case). Most of what's been found since then is S5. Which is remarkable, if you think about it.
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Post by Peter Johnston on May 4, 2014 19:25:43 GMT
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Post by Alex Dering on May 18, 2014 23:03:53 GMT
In the first episode, at the very beginning, there's a fairly loud piece of music in the background. And I am convinced I've heard it before. Has it been used elsewhere in Doctor Who?
I also like how the first episode has the dialog that runs to "So, you want this thing I have that's unique." All that's missing is breaking the fourth wall and having PM slip in a demonic laugh ... "Bwah ha ha! Unique. Like all the episodes! Bwa ha ha!!!!!!"
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Post by shellyharman67 on May 21, 2014 7:15:08 GMT
When you remove something, you make it more sought after
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