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Thursday 28 July 2016

Glimpses of Eight Days A Week

The Washington DC concert, 1964.
As we are drawing closer to the premiere of the film, we are being treated to more clips. In an exclusive filmed interview with ET, we are treated to quite a few samples from Ron Howard's upcoming documentary on The Beatles, "Eight Days A Week". As is evident from these two sample screenshots, more than one Beatles concert has been colourised. What do you think about colourisation? We are fine with it over at the WogBlog HQ. It's not as if these televised concerts are fine art.

See the film at ET.

Blackpool, 1965.

9 comments:

CrackinThunder said...

If colorization is done carefully and correctly it will definitely be an added visual bonus to seeing the cleaned up footage. Many of the B&W films are still out there and available for purists.

Matt Jones said...

Wow that Washington snippet looks good

RAJ said...

Still no rare and "unseen" footage that I can tell. That's what I'm waiting for.

wardo said...

With all the hype about this, it's looking more and more like a reiteration of Anthology episodes 2 through 5. And I really hope I'm wrong about that.

Anonymous said...

I think the colorized fotage looks pretty bad. I could have done something better but no one asked me.

Unknown said...

To me this looks quite rare and unseen http://i.imgur.com/SaAPQNi.jpg

Unknown said...

Why would they chop up the standard 4x3 footage and try to make it fit a scope image (2.35x1). It would be hard enough to try to fit to the HDTV (1.85x1) image. I can only hope that they did it carefully. Colorization is fine. I may have a problem with butchering the image. I'll hope for the best.

Elliott Marx said...

I think colorization is absolutely the way to go, the film will come of as being more consistent and perhaps visually appealing. The Beatles music is timeless, but the haircuts of 1964, and trouser cuts, and the stage decorations are noticeably out of date - which for some younger audiences may be a real distraction. Considering that it is not convenient to digitally change the clothing of every audience member, colorizing the footage is one way of making the visuals more ageless - to match the music.

James Peet said...

Does anybody have a clue as to what is going to happen to the Shea film? Will it come out to buy? I wondered whether there were copyright issues preventing it being part of the new film, but it's a Subafilms project iirc? Obviously it'll make a nice little package - maybe with the original audio and the dubbed sound the boys recorded in 1966 as an audio extra??

What do other fellow fabular people think?