Just received my copy --
I think we should call this Eros-Carlotta because on the backside of the DVD case there's an Eros logo.
The DVD (available on two discs with a break exactly where the theatrical interval happens) is anamorphic and the movie (PAL) runs for 3 hours 4 minutes (quoted on the case).
The best part is a statement by Ramesh Sippy in an extra feature --
He clearly is seen stating that he shot Sholay with Gabbar dying but the censors would not allow it... That's straight from the horse's mouth!
I agree with all those who think that the Carlotta PQ more "real" than DEI-Eros. Yes, even though a little grainy at times, the movie on Carlotta is the same color and tone as seen in theatres. DEI-Eros appears to be sexed up.
The sound in Dolby Digital 1.0 is a vast improvement over previous mono-written-on-5.1.
I do believe there is slightly more picture information on the left and right edges compared to Ultra DVD. If true, this is the "widest" Sholay DVD so far, though yes, there's a little cropping horizontally (compared to DEI-Eros).
Sholay was re-released in India in 35-cinemascope (I think) in 2003/2004. Perhaps the Eros-Carlotta transfer is from that master...
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Sanjay wrote:
NewDeep wrote:
The other side of the coin is when the director shoots (with matting) with an intention to show both in cinemas as well as on TV. In that case, the open-matte is actually intended to be shown on TV screenings! I'm not sure what Ramesh Sippy had in mind.
I would'nt give Ramesh Sippy so much credit, that he would have thought of the framing for television. It should be safe to say that Sholay was only intended to be seen widescreen.
Just compare the Hema-in-mandir-and-Dharam-fooling-her-with-a-"megaphone" shots of the full-frame Eros-B4U with the matted-widescreen of Eros-Carlotta, and then tell me if you still think Sholay was never intended to be seen in full-frame. This is just one example where the open-matte has very creative composing that "all fits in." Look at Dharam's legwork as he fools her---those postures etc are all very very sensible.
There's not a single shot in open-matte Sholay that appears to have any edges worth "chopping off" or having "unnecessary info" to be matted out. Every bit & piece in the full-frame is carefully composed. Matting out, in my opinion, only ruins the picture. Compare this to movies that were shot for later matting-out of unnecessary info... an example already discussed is below:
NewDeep wrote:
Take a look at this example. See the section which has movie stills from "Forever Young." One is widescreen still generated by matting (as intended by director) and the other is the same scene in open-matte. See how the open-matte ruins the shot. This ruining happens because the director intended to show this movie only in a matted form. This is the link:
http://www.michaeldvd.com.au/Articles/W ... imer2.htmlCan you really find any such shot in open-matte Sholay? I couldn't.
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Koolie83 wrote:
no other place except amazon.fr?
I cant understand french
Help is available in English
http://www.amazon.fr/exec/obidos/tg/bro ... 74-6921717 Plus like Stephen says:
Stephen wrote:
If you register at either the U.S. or U.K. Amazon, your details will also be automatically entered at the French one - then just click the usual buttons to order.