by Darrel_Griffin » 29 Apr 2017 08:06
Hi again Oliver.
Yes Samuel is correct about the booklet in the PH release - I hadn't thought to look in there before, but it says "The isolated score track was produced and supplied by Twilight Time/Red Jam LLC." I don't own the TT release myself (I live in the UK, and with TT releases usually being very limited edition, they end up being too expensive for me to buy), and in any event I have no facility for digitally extracting to audio tracks to do a sample-for-sample comparison, but perhaps Samuel does. I can only assume that the TT and PH isolated scores are indeed identical.
I have listened again to the first few minutes of the commentary track, which I believe is the same commentary on all releases that have it. If you watch the movie from 02:46, there is a good sequence of shots demonstrating the colour filter applied across the top portion of the image. At 02:58, John Carpenter says "The director of photography Gary Kibbe is using some heavy duty filters over this particular sequence to give it a kind of a reddish duskish feel, it's actually shot in the dead middle of the day. Now you can see the top of your screen there is reddish." I thought at some point he also said something about giving the movie a 'Western' look, but after a quick check I haven't found it, although at 06:14 he does mention he did lots of quick cuts in a style like Sam Peckinpah, and it's well known that he loves Westerns and has always wanted to direct one. Vampires is about he closest he has come to achieving this. I also own the UK Sony DVD, and this also has a reddish hue to it, which seems similar to the PH Blu-ray. Anyway, while this provides no definite answer to what the overall colour balance should be, we do at least know that the reddish filter effect is meant to be there, as it would have been on the lens of the camera during the filming. Well, unless I am mistaken and the effect was applied during post-production, but either way, since it is not uniform across the whole image but only applied at the top, it is clearly part of the original intention.
This is simply a case where there is no definitive version - the French release arguably does not have the correct colour balance, and has the shot substitution near the end (and annoying though this is, personally I don't think this really spoils the movie), and the TT/PH releases seem to have crushed blacks, so you just have to make your choice about what is more important to you. I own a number of movies where there is a similar tough choice to make. It might be that one version is longer, whereas another has better picture quality. Or a movie is on DVD with the original language soundtrack and English subtitles, and on Blu-ray but only with an English dub soundtrack. So I very much empathise with your frustrations!
I agree with you that most home releases are probably graded without much reference to the artists' original intentions. Occasionally transfers are supervised by the director and/or DOP, so they should be better in theory, although as you said, decades on they might not have good recall of their own original intentions either.
Regarding different re-releases of movies in general, interestingly, in the old 'Guardian' interview split over the PH releases of Vampires and Ghosts of Mars, John Carpenter actually talks about this very topic. He is quite cynical about it - his view is that the studios like to keep re-releasing different versions of the same movie purely to take more money from the wallets of the poor punters. I have to say I largely agree with him: buy a full-screen DVD, then a widescreen DVD, than an anamorphic widescreen DVD, a director's cut version, a special edition with more extra features, then a bare bones Blu-ray, then a Blu-ray with extra features, then a Blu-ray with a new 4K scan... Having said that, although different companies seem to like including exclusive extras to encourage customers to buy THEIR release, I doubt they actually collaborate with each other in a deliberate attempt to get customers to buy EVERY different release. Although I'm sure some conspiracy theorists will disagree with me...
As for the Vampires soundtrack, if there is no product in the world that has the entire music track in stereo, then neither you nor anyone else can buy it. But if the raw materials exist to create a stereo version, well maybe it will be included in a future release, perhaps a 4K version, or 8K version or whatever... and then they can get you to purchase it all over again... ker-CHING!
Sorry I can't be more help, but I hope you can still enjoy the isolated score in glorious mono. And maybe try to look on the bright side - it's better than having no isolated score at all, and at least it's uncompressed, and not in dreaded Dolby Digital!
Hmmm... well I suspect this will be scant comfort to you. What can I say... it's a cruel cruel world!
All the best,
Darrel.