The 'Toy Story' You Remember

(animationobsessive.substack.com)

142 points | by ani_obsessive 2 hours ago ago

28 comments

  • aidenn0 a few seconds ago

    Beauty and the Beast on Bluray looks completely different from what I remember; I had assumed that they had just regraded it, but given that it was developed with CAPS, maybe this is part of the effect?

  • timenotwasted 27 minutes ago

    This makes so much more sense now. After having kids I've been watching my fair share of Pixar and I just never recalled how flat and bland everything looked but I would always chalk it up to my brain not recalling how it looked at the time. Good to know I guess that it wasn't just entirely nostalgia but sad that we continue to lose some of this history and so soon.

    • behringer 20 minutes ago

      Things like this are being preserved, you just have to sail the high seas.

      • squigz 10 minutes ago

        What sort of terms might one search for?

        • behringer 6 minutes ago

          toy story film scan on Kagi led me to a reddit page that may or may not contain links that might help you, but don't dawdle those links may not work forever.

          Another one that's been hard to find is the 4k matrix original color grading release. Ping me if you have it! (Not the 1080p release)

      • dmonitor 7 minutes ago

        Would be annoying, but I suppose you could also recalibrate your display to turn down the greens?

        • behringer 5 minutes ago

          VLC has a lot of image manipulation options.

  • vinhnx a minute ago

    What an excellent piece! I thoroughly enjoyed reading it, brought my childhood memories flooding back. I have so many fond recollections of that 90s era, including "A Bug's Life." I remember gathering with my cousins at my grandmother's house to watch these films on VHS. Time flies.

  • hekkle 37 minutes ago

    I'm surprised they can't just put a filter on the digital versions to achieve a similar look and feel to the 35mm version.

    It is clear that the animators factored in the colour changes from the original media to 35mm, so it seems a disservice to them to re-release their works without honouring how they intended the films to be seen.

    • etempleton 31 minutes ago

      They could, but it would require some work to get it right. This is very similar to conversations that happen regularly in the retro game scene regarding CRT monitors vs modern monitors for games of a certain era. The analog process was absolutely factored in when the art was being made, so if you want a similar visuals on a modern screen you will need some level of thoughtful post processing.

      • Torn 15 minutes ago

        Disney 100% has access to colorists and best in class colour grading software. It must have been a business (cost cutting) decision?

        • etempleton 6 minutes ago

          The vast majority of people will not care nor even notice. Some people will notice and say, hey, why is it "blurry." So do you spend a good chunk of time and money to make it look accurate or do you just dump the file onto the server and call it a day?

      • philistine 26 minutes ago

        And ultimately, what you need to achieve acceptable CRT effects is resolution. Only now, with 4K and above, can we start to portray the complex interactions between the electron beam and the produced image by your console. But the colour banding that caused the hearts of The Legend of Zelda to show a golden sheen is still unreachable.

  • sja 27 minutes ago

    Neat! The Youtube channel Noodle recently did a related deep dive into the differences in the releases of The Matrix [0]. The back half of the video also touches on the art of transferring from film/video to digital.

    [0]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPU-kXEhSgk

    • larusso 8 minutes ago

      I always felt the old matrix had a more colder blue. And it changed drastically when the second and third hit cinemas. At least that was my memory because I watched a double feature when the second one hit the theatre's and complained then that the Matrix somehow looked weird. But it could also be my memory since I also own the blue ray release.

      Another movie with the same / similar problem is the DVD release of the Lord of the Rings Extended editions. Both Blu-ray and 4K version. As far as I remember is that they fixed it for the theatrical version in 4K but not extended.

  • yCombLinks 39 minutes ago

    The texture of the film grain makes Mulan and Aladdin really look better. The large simple filled sections look like they have so much more to them.

    • kemayo 36 minutes ago

      The one frame they showed from the Lion King really stood out. The difference in how the background animals were washed out by the sunlight makes the film version look significantly better.

  • spott 23 minutes ago

    Man, this makes me want to watch original 35mm releases of all these films. It is unfortunate that they are so hard to get your hands on these days.

  • voltaireodactyl an hour ago

    Excellent article really enjoyed it.

    • cjohnson318 42 minutes ago

      Yeah, this is the kind of thing that makes me really enjoy the internet.

  • jtolmar 18 minutes ago

    Is it possible to replicate the digital->film transition with tone mapping? (I assume the answer is yes, but what is the actual mapping?)

  • dabluecaboose 38 minutes ago

    Those comparisons were strangely jarring. It's odd to see (on the internet awash with "Mandela Effect" joke conspiracies) direct photo/video evidence that things we remember from our childhood have indeed been changed; sometimes for the worse!

  • squigz 10 minutes ago

    Wow. Based on those comparisons they really do feel completely different. Really remarkable how such relatively simple changes in lighting and whatnot can drastically change the mood.

    And here I was thinking of re-watching some old Disney/Pixar movies soon :(

  • BolexNOLA 23 minutes ago

    It’s fascinating to me how many of these discussions boil down to dialing in dynamic range for the medium in question.

    As the Aladdin still shows with its wildly altered colors clearly other aspects matter/are at play. But the analog/digital discussions always seem, at least to me, to hinge heavily on DR. It’s just so interesting to me.

    Many of us remember the leap from SD->HD. Many of us also can point out how 4K is nice and even noticeably better than FHD, but man…getting a 4K OLED TV with (and this is the important part) nice DR was borderline another SD->HD jump to me. Especially with video games and older films shot and displayed on film stock from start to finish. The difference is incredibly striking.

  • wilg 15 minutes ago

    If you're interested in these 35mm film scans, I recommend watching this excellent YouTube video "SE7EN & How 35mm Scans Lie to You" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQwQRFLFDd8 for some more background on how this works, and especially how these comparisons can sometimes be misleading and prey on your nostalgia a bit.

    If you're interested in making digital footage look exactly like film in every possible way, I'll shill our product Filmbox: https://videovillage.com/filmbox/