February 19, 2014

Restoring old films - Criterion

Interesting article and video from Gizmodo:
How Criterion Collection Brings Movies Back From the Dead
There are few names that represent a commitment to the distribution of classic films like the Criterion Collection. Since the 1980s, they have remastered and released hundreds of movies on Laserdisc, DVD and Blu-Ray. We recently visited the Criterion headquarters in New York to get a first-hand look at the meticulous restoration process that brings cinematic gems back to life.

When we spoke with technical director Lee Kline and the team of editors and re-touchers at Criterion, they were in the process of restoring Alfred Hitchcock's 1940 espionage thriller, Foreign Correspondent. In the video above, Kline talks about how the first step in the process is tracking down the negative, or a print, that is in decent condition. In this case, that meant going to the Library of Congress, which had the original negative of the film. Criterion scanned it at 2K resolution, frame by frame, into digital files.

The digitized reels then make the rounds from department to department. Color is graded; dirt and scratches are retouched; audio is remastered. The team uses a combination of automated software that detects and removes flaws in the image, and manual re-touching of every frame. The entire process can from a few weeks to a few months for a single film, depending on the original condition it was in. Once the fidelity of the final product is assured, Criterion art director Eric Skillman conceptualizes the terrific art that accompanies the disc.
High geekdom -- these people have some nice hardware to play work with. That audio processing software looks very cool. Posted by DaveH at February 19, 2014 10:48 AM
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