Also, if you don't like the grading of Duel, you probably don't like
the grading of the Eastwood/Dirty Harry movies and Once Upon A Time
In The West and Easy Rider either? The color in the 70s was a bit
washed out and many movies were shot on 16mm due to lower budgets,
but I think that it still remains a matter of taste. Someone like
Tarantino now tries to achieve that same grading for retro effect
purposes and he's doing a good job at it and I really love that look!
I don't like the look of many new/current Hollywood productions and I
won't even bother watching Avator.
So again, if you don't like something, it doesn't mean that it wasn't
done right. Who are YOU to determine how standards should be like?
Color grading and hamburgers are two different things.
At 16-3-2011 15:59, you wrote:
>
>
>They are too dark when viewed on a computer, or on the movie screen
>at the theatre, too.
>Has nothing to do with needing a new TV, and everything to do with
>poor quality of editing so that people can't see what is going
>on. The Spielberg Syndrome... "this famous guy did this on that
>first hit movie, so now everyone has to do it". The movie was a
>hit because of the MOVIE... but it was a FLOP when it came to
>visibility and poor lighting, color and grading.
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