The Narnia Video's Quality

Danny Darnia

New member
I'm saying this because I'm un-satisfied with the quality of Narnia's video that sold in my country. The pictures are too dark (people who not saw it in the theatre always guessing what did the pevensie do in the dark time.....such as when they through Mr. Beaver's tunnel).
The funniest scene that I'm waiting for..............when Ed drew the glass and moustache in the lion's statue is un-clear.
I'm not satisfied with that. What about in your place?
 
Sounds like a bootleg copy being flick off as the real thing.. I haven't heard of this problem anywere else.
 
it's an original one. It's mean that the recording company inmy country is......BAD....BAd n BAD. i'm so jealous with you all!!!
 
Queen Lucy the Valiant said:
It could be a bootleg copy, but then a error may have happened when the were making copies, i guess.
You can't get videos in welly anymore! lol

I am going to conclude that you probably have a bootleg copy....according to a friend of mine in Europe, bootlegs are rampant there, partly due to their differing IP laws. Dark darks would be a definite symptom of this, as the dynamic range of film far exceeds that of video.

As for copying errors on DVD's? Just doesn't happen. Production DVD's are actually stamped, like vinyl records once were. So, a DVD either plays or it doesn't play.

I am a professional video engineer, and watch the movie on a top-of-the-line consumer monitor that has ben very carefully set up to show what is wrong with an image as much as show what is right. So far, I have found nothing to object to on the DVD. In general, of all the things you can put on a DVD, feature films are the easiest to get right because the 3:2 pulldown needed to accomodate film's 24 frame/sec effectively increases the available data bandwidth by a substantial amount.
 
timbalionguy said:
I am going to conclude that you probably have a bootleg copy....according to a friend of mine in Europe, bootlegs are rampant there, partly due to their differing IP laws. Dark darks would be a definite symptom of this, as the dynamic range of film far exceeds that of video.

As for copying errors on DVD's? Just doesn't happen. Production DVD's are actually stamped, like vinyl records once were. So, a DVD either plays or it doesn't play.

I am a professional video engineer, and watch the movie on a top-of-the-line consumer monitor that has ben very carefully set up to show what is wrong with an image as much as show what is right. So far, I have found nothing to object to on the DVD. In general, of all the things you can put on a DVD, feature films are the easiest to get right because the 3:2 pulldown needed to accomodate film's 24 frame/sec effectively increases the available data bandwidth by a substantial amount.


So, we couldn't do something for the bootleg's one?
 
timbalionguy said:
I don't want to encourage bootlegging!

Ha...ha...I knew that. I'm just joking. I already mailed the company which distributed it, coz they distributed it LEGALLY!
What they did really diappointed all Narnia fans in my place.

Thanks for the information,Timbalionguy!
 
I'm in Indonesia, Ernie? Do the bad video only in my country? (~_~) I e-mailed the video distributor last Saturday,and they still didn't reply it!
 
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