Moderators: lazyben, static14, texasvinyl
static14 wrote:

ScoJo wrote:So do I!!static14 wrote:Fantastic score, I fully endorse this post!

chiefbrody wrote:First listen since picking this up at Christmas.I loved Covenant! Do not recall the score to be honest.
I have to say, I was surprised by the lukewarm reaction to Covenant. I thought it was more of what the public wanted. It was probably a slightly strange mix of Prometheus-lite with bits of Alien and the end of Aliens tacked on (and a teeny bit of Predator?), but it was enjoyable enough. I would have preferred Prometheus 2, but clearly the box office didn't justify it. I do wonder, though, if it's just a bit of 'The Phantom Menace' syndrome, where you want to like it that much that you're willing to overlook deficiencies. To digress further, I think The Last Jedi was the point where I first got to judge a Star Wars film without nostalgia bias (I'm somewhere in the middle of the folk who think it's 'best ever' and 'life-endingly bad').
I recall enjoying this score at the time, with its various nods to Goldsmith.
chiefbrody wrote:First listen since picking this up at Christmas.I liked Covenant fine. And the score as well. It is way better than Prometheus which is a terribly uneven film. All that said, I don't care about it the way I care(d) about Alien and, even though Ridley Scott's career is uneven in its own right, I expected more from both films.
I have to say, I was surprised by the lukewarm reaction to Covenant. I thought it was more of what the public wanted. It was probably a slightly strange mix of Prometheus-lite with bits of Alien and the end of Aliens tacked on (and a teeny bit of Predator?), but it was enjoyable enough. I would have preferred Prometheus 2, but clearly the box office didn't justify it. I do wonder, though, if it's just a bit of 'The Phantom Menace' syndrome, where you want to like it that much that you're willing to overlook deficiencies. To digress further, I think The Last Jedi was the point where I first got to judge a Star Wars film without nostalgia bias (I'm somewhere in the middle of the folk who think it's 'best ever' and 'life-endingly bad').
I recall enjoying this score at the time, with its various nods to Goldsmith.
static14 wrote:So good.
Mateo Sanboval wrote:Sidebar: That film isn't available anywhere in it's OAR as far as I can tell. Nor has it ever been properly mastered for HD. Errors of oversight that warrant remedying posthaste.What was the OAR? It’s a weird little flick, could only have been made when it was made, lush 90s period piece, rife with interesting details and design, but still unafraid to be pulpy. Also Kilmers accent.....
Hatter313 wrote:Original aspect ratio.Mateo Sanboval wrote:Sidebar: That film isn't available anywhere in it's OAR as far as I can tell. Nor has it ever been properly mastered for HD. Errors of oversight that warrant remedying posthaste.What was the OAR? It’s a weird little flick, could only have been made when it was made, lush 90s period piece, rife with interesting details and design, but still unafraid to be pulpy. Also Kilmers accent.....
static14 wrote:Pretty sure it was shot and shown in theaters at 2.35:1It was indeed - my old UK dvd was letterboxed in the correct aspect, not sure about R1 version.
ScoJo wrote:Exactly so, Static. The US DVD is 2.00:1 and it is only so-so in quality. There is a HD upscale floating around (maybe on Amazon streaming?), but it's in the wrong ratio as well. There is a German BD of unknown (to me) quality, but it only includes a dubbed German audio track. I had no idea you lucky Brits had a DVD release in the OAR. At this point, I'd probably take that over any thing else available.static14 wrote:Pretty sure it was shot and shown in theaters at 2.35:1It was indeed - my old UK dvd was letterboxed in the correct aspect, not sure about R1 version.
William Goldman's book 'Which Lie Did I Tell' is a treasure of behind-the-big-movies tattle tales, the section on GaTD is especially great - VERY troubled production. I mean, lions. Y'know?
At one point though, it was that other big cat Kilmer who was slowing things down with his unpredictable behaviour, so producer/co-star Douglas took him to one side and told him 'hey kid, buck up - or do you wanna have a career like Eric Roberts??'
Gold.