Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

S3E01 - Film Preservation and Home Video with Blake Blasingame

S3E01 - Film Preservation and Home Video with Blake Blasingame

FromFilm Formally


S3E01 - Film Preservation and Home Video with Blake Blasingame

FromFilm Formally

ratings:
Length:
89 minutes
Released:
Jan 19, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Welcome to season 3! To kick things off, we’ve brought Duplitech Film Services Manager Blake Blasingame in to discuss film preservation and mastering for home video. Are you ready for 88 minutes of unadulterated shop talk about grain structure, bit depth, oversampling, color grading, and vinegar syndrome? Of course you are! This is Film Formally, after all.
In this episode, we discuss:

The process of preserving and restoring films for Blu-Ray and DVD releases.


Scan resolutions - 4k, and the value of oversampling.


Vinegar syndrome: the silent killer.


How film elements are sourced for scans - negatives, IPs, IBs, and release prints.


Robert Richardson and revisionism.


William Peter Blatty and the restoration of the lost Legion cut of The Exorcist III


More audio restoration!


If you’d like to support the show, here’s a link to our Patreon.
Additional Resources:
Works discussed during this episode:
Snow Falling on Cedars
The Exorcist III / Legion
The Thing
The French Connection
The Big Lebowski
Blade Runner 2049
Mad Max: Fury Road
The Heartbreak Kid
Playtime
Tree of Wooden Clogs
Army of Shadows
Ran
The works of Wong Kar-Wai
Released:
Jan 19, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (51)

Film Formally gets granular about how movies work by studying a technique or trait through its best examples. Independent filmmakers and friends Devan Scott and Will Ross leverage years of experience watching and making movies to bring you spirited and approachable conversations, offering brick-by-brick analysis and discussions about how films work.