Man! Some folks here LOVE to pontificate before getting all the facts.
I am reading here and in the original eFX DV ANH helmet thread folks
throwing around film terminology incorrectly, particularly as it relates to Blu-ray,
and even some ghastly comments that would suggest pre1950s Academy Ratio
flilms like
Citizen Kane would not be better in HD, even at 1.37:1.
HD is not "all about 16x9" which is an aspect ratio of 1.78:1.
It is about HIGH DEFINITION, which is not aspect ratio specific.
I thought RPFers would be defacto film spec nerds, but I see that is
not always the case, at least when it comes to different types of aspect
ratios, film, and what Blu-ray can do for films like
Star Wars as well
as a black and whilte Academy Ratio film like
Casablanca.
Blu-ray is not aspect ratio specific...Blu-ray is not all about widescreen.
It is about having up to 6x the resolution of DVD and uncompressed audio.
Blu-ray serves films like
The Wizard of Oz, and
Gone With
the Wind just as well at it does
Star Wars and
Avatar
so long as those films are properly restored and transfered to HD.
As it relates to this topic, know that Lucas abhors pan and scan versions
of his films even more than he dislikes the original theatrical versions of
EP IV, V and
VI.
Lucas has been a long time advocate of OAR (original aspect ratio) for
all films, along with his friends Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, and
Steven Speilberg.
Remember that the original three Star Wars films were some of the very few
films on VHS that were readily available in their OAR widescreen iterations.
Thanks to televisions going 16x9 or even wider, it has meant
less pressure to put out the films on pan and scan, even moving from 2.35:1 to
1.78:1, which Lucas will not do. He will not go MAR (Modified Aspect Ratio)
even just to a 1.78:1 MAR from 2.35:1 OAR unless he is simultaneously
releasing a 2.35:1 OAR version.
There were issues with audio on the first DVD released,
including one instance where the Foley is programmed oppostite of how it should be
for a scene with laser fire in EPIV, and frankly, it would also appear that
Ben Burtt has now tinkered with the audio in
EPIV so John Williams'
score is quieter than it was before so more of Burtt's special effects audio
is apparent as the X-wings head to their confrontation with the Death Star.
grumble grumbe....
For
EP 1: The Phantom Menace, which I know many do not care much about,
the video suffered from some haloing on the DVD release that we should expect to be
resolved for the Blu-rays.
Another interesting thing to consider is that Lucas shot on HD for a few scenes in EP1
(were Anakin gets his blood drawn...note that Anakin is much taller in that scene
and his hair is darker as it was shot much later) and
EP II and
EP III were shot on HD, which is where we will see limitations with
HD being transferred to HD rather than the original trilogy, which shot on 35mm will still have
more resoltuion than can be represented on Blu-ray.
Lucas was an early adopter of HD film, so I am sure the films will look great, but
I am really curious to see how EPII looks compared to EPIV in terms of image quality.
As for Academy Ratio films like
The Wizard of Oz,
Bambi,
and
The Day the Earth Stood Still,
they all look
great on Blu-ray, phenomenal actually, thanks to what we now have,
the opposite of letter-boxing for 4x3 televisions, but "pillarboxing" for Academy Ratio films
in widescreen televisions. Disney has taken it so far to add optional, scene specific,
painted side panels that tie to the in what they have called "DisneyView." Check out
Pinocchio on Blu-ray for an excellent example of this.
If you actually want to understand the different widescreen formats, there are
two great sites for that, which actually include shots of Star Wars in some of their
examples:
This website is a great place to start
widescreen.org - The Letterbox and Widescreen Advocacy Page
along with this one
American WideScreen Museum - provided as a public service by Martin Hart
Peace out.
"I can assure you that the BD will NOT be pan and scan."
From a friend at Lucasfilm, after he heard that folks actually thought it'd be pan and scan.