Restoring Roman Holiday (Video 2002) Poster

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6/10
Perhaps a test for your home theater set-up
charlytully1 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
The bulk of RESTORING ROMAN HOLIDAY is taken up with before-and-after comparisons between the original master which had "400 to 500 pieces of dirt per frame" and the digital restoration, in which 300 Apple computers worked 24\7 for months to remove "99%" of this "granularity." Even when the editors of this short use the split-screen and moving split-screen devices, the "improvement" wrought by the restoration is barely perceptible on an ordinary television screen. Perhaps a large screen running a Blu-ray disc, or an art house movie screen, would present a "clean-up" of this magnitude in a more positive light. However, the talking heads from Paramount offer no explanation as to why the picture is not in sync with the sound for a significant portion of the middle of the "restored film" (for dialog, not singing; and the technicians DO talk about the sound quality in other respects).
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6/10
"The film is extremely dirty . . . "
tadpole-596-91825615 February 2014
Warning: Spoilers
. . . and Ryan Gomez, project manager for Paramount Studio's subcontractor, Lowry Digital Images, in the ROMAN HOLIDAY restoration project, isn't even talking sex. Gomez states that 400 to 500 particles of dirt needed to be removed from EACH of the frames of this 1953 flick nominated for 10 Oscars. At 24 frames per second, with a running time of 118 minutes, 3 seconds, this means between 68 and 85 million grains of dust were digitally eradicated from an original film master by banks of 300 computers running 24\7 for weeks on end. To the untrained eye, there is virtually no perceptible difference between the many "before" and "after" restoration comparisons accomplished by "screen wipes" moving horizontally from right to left and back again. I could see SLIGHT differences if I paused the picture, or ran it at one-eighth slow-motion speed, which leads me to believe maybe they should have used those 300 computers to find a cure for cancer! But then I'm sure some elitists would sniff at the "dirty" version of ROMAN HOLIDAY, muttering, "Another one bites the dust."
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Good Look at the Technical Side
Michael_Elliott21 March 2012
Restoring Roman Holiday (2002)

*** (out of 4)

Short but detailed featurette taking a look at the work that had to be done in order to bring ROMAN HOLIDAY to DVD looking better than it ever had. Phil Murphy (Paramount Senior V.P of Operations), Barry Allen, Ron Smith (Paramount DVD Mastering), Steven Elkin (head film librarian) and members of Lowry Digital Image team are all interviewed about the work that had to be done with the film. Overall this featurette, running less than ten-minutes, does a pretty good job at explaining all the details that had to go into putting this movie to DVD. We get several examples of how scenes looked before the restoration and then the finished project. They talk about the biggest problem being dirt on the print and they show how they're able to remove it. There's certainly nothing ground-breaking in this featurette but I think those interested in the technical side of DVDs should enjoy the information.
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