I watched Hot Snow last night and found it hard to believe it was film made from 405-line videotape. I have a huge CRT telly (probably one of the biggest they made before CRTs were abandoned) and Hot Snow looked as sharp as anything, I could see every pore on the actors' faces. Amazing stuff. It didn't look this good in 1961, that's for sure.Timeless A-Peel wrote: Agreed. The restoration has made a world of difference. I can actually see and hear what's going on, compared to the A&E releases where I had to crank up the volume and try to spot Steed and Cathy in the gloom.
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- Frankymole
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amen...myself, worked in u.s. TV for yrs, at the tail end of the video tape era..and the depth of video taped programs, varies..hot snow, now duly remastered..lokks very very goodFrankymole wrote:I watched Hot Snow last night and found it hard to believe it was film made from 405-line videotape. I have a huge CRT telly (probably one of the biggest they made before CRTs were abandoned) and Hot Snow looked as sharp as anything, I could see every pore on the actors' faces. Amazing stuff. It didn't look this good in 1961, that's for sure.Timeless A-Peel wrote: Agreed. The restoration has made a world of difference. I can actually see and hear what's going on, compared to the A&E releases where I had to crank up the volume and try to spot Steed and Cathy in the gloom.