Page 10 of 10

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2017 7:36 pm
by Ahab
Moshrom wrote:To be clear, the Criterion discs are pitched 1.4 semitones lower than the Arrow discs.
Thanks for pointing that out.

It helps to explain why it was so noticeable to me when trying to do a comparison between the two sets. Am still glad I have both sets because of the difference in content, but I do wish that at least one of the sets had the correct pitch.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2017 10:59 pm
by PianoMan88
We may have misunderstood each other, likely because I did not express myself very clearly.

Yes, when listening/watching side by side the difference is very clear, because most people have good-to-very good relative pitch recognition. If watched alone, unless you remember that the excerpt you provided begins with a C (in Arrow's edition) and not a B (in the soundtrack) then you could not easily tell which version you are hearing, and you would need perfect pitch in order to identify. Again, if you hear side by side it's a different story.

Your Seinfeld example I think helps clear what I wanted to say. If Dekalog featured well-known actors and music that is easily recognizable then absolutely yes, this would be a big issue when watching. Why? Because most of us can vividly remember the voice of Jerry Seinfeld, Jason Alexander etc, so any alteration would hit us over the head.

However, with Dekalog I am sure many people are not in the same position, where they recognize the voices of the actors or the soundtrack. Now, if Arrow has altered the pitch incorrectly then it is indeed a mistake, but I do not think it affects the viewer as strongly as you seem to be suggesting.

After all, how many people are going to view the Criterion and the Arrow presentations back to back? I think this may well be the reason this issue has not been brought up before, especially since the Arrow edition has been around for over a year.

So, to summarize the "definitive" tag (which I dislike attributing to any edition) may be lost because of the inaccuracy, but the enjoyement and the experience by the viewer is definitely not affected much in this particular instance (unless you are a Polish film connoisseur).

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Thu Feb 09, 2017 4:15 am
by Moshrom
Yes, I agree with you -- it's not something anyone who is unfamiliar with the voices of the actors or the specifics of the score would notice, regardless of their pitch-discerning ability. I didn't mean to imply anything otherwise.

It is, however, still something anyone can notice should they choose to, so at the very least I'd appreciate any sort of acknowledgement of the error from anyone involved with the release.

Also, this will be the last 'bump' from me to this thread, so if a response is not given, I'll assume Arrow are aware of the issue and have chosen to ignore it (like the many owners of the set here who haven't replied and would rather I not repeatedly bum them out with these discoveries - sorry).

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Thu Feb 09, 2017 5:36 am
by tenia
I think part of the discussion comes from the communication about Arrow's care to get the proper frame rate and the proper sound pitch and yet, there's a pitch difference between the set and the OST CDs.

As Moshrom righly points out, not detecting the issue also doesn't mean it isn't there in the first place. It might not be bothering (see below) but it's there.
Moshrom wrote:Again, it's equivalent to PAL speed-up, which is well-established as being something that even untrained, non-musicians can notice.
I challenge that assertion. I doubt anybody watching for the first time a movie with a PAL Speed up could detect the issue if it wasn't for already having some reference (an opening logo cue, a canon classical piece, the voice of an actor or an actress).

I've watched lots of movies that turned out to be incorrectly encoded in 1080i50 instead of 1080p24 and I usually couldn't detect it. I'll probably ear the difference on the French BD of Z, because I'm very familiar with it through the Criterion DVD, but when I saw What We Do In The Shadows or Starred Up for the first time ? Absolutely no clue they were in 1080i and I would have no idea if they were pitch corrected or not (which is another variable).

However, I was able to easily detect this stuff on the French The Brood and Scanners BD because the opening Pathé logo was higher pitched, but that's only because I've had watched so many Pathé BDs in 1080p the previous weeks that my memory had a fresh A/B comparison.


While I don't doubt many people could easily notice a pitch difference during an AB comparison, I thus doubt they could find out from a brand new sample that it's improperly pitched. It's, after all, not much different from all the recent discussions over color-timing of new restorations : while some are so weird it's relatively easy to notice the change, many discussions only started (and kept on) because of / thanks to the availability of AB comparisons and / or lots of prior knowledge. Without these, I think many differences would have been unnoticed.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Thu Feb 09, 2017 5:52 am
by Moshrom
tenia wrote:
Moshrom wrote:Again, it's equivalent to PAL speed-up, which is well-established as being something that even untrained, non-musicians can notice.
I challenge that assertion. I doubt anybody watching for the first time a movie with a PAL Speed up could detect the issue if it wasn't for already having some reference
Sorry, as I mentioned in my previous post, this assertion should have included the condition when comparing to a reference sample. I doubt anyone alive could listen to a voice pitched 0.7 semitones too high or too low and, without a reference, pick out that it's been altered.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Thu Feb 09, 2017 7:35 am
by tenia
We agree then :) (and on your comparisons, it's perfectly noticeable).

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Sat Feb 11, 2017 5:51 am
by M Sanderson
It's definitely great that someone noticed.

Didn't affect my viewing but I can see how it'd upset others.

Doubtful a replacement program will happen as surely it'd be too expensive.

This is something that will surely help in future restoration work, which is developing all the time.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Sat Feb 11, 2017 11:54 am
by hearthesilence
I will notice if the pitch is a half semitone off very easily and quickly if I'm listening to a familiar voice and/or song - a common occurrence with bootleg recordings - so a 0.7 semitone is pretty damn significant. Oy, well, so much for having the one definitive BD mastering that no one can improve upon.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Wed Apr 26, 2017 4:42 pm
by Costa
i've started watching the Dekalog,
Saw the first 2 episodes.
i read in the notes of episode 1:

"Artur Barcis closes this Dekalog story - and its next nine parts - with his stare."

But that is not the case in these 2 episodes that i've seen!
What am I missing here? :-s

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Wed Apr 26, 2017 5:33 pm
by swo17
I don't know that he's literally in the final shot, but that character is the only thing common to all of the episodes, a kind of angelic figure who merely observes (laments? judges?) the main characters' actions.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Wed Apr 26, 2017 5:38 pm
by knives
He is actually missing from two.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Wed Apr 26, 2017 5:42 pm
by Ribs
I expect it is meant to say "opens" - still wrong but less so.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Wed Apr 26, 2017 5:45 pm
by swo17
knives wrote:He is actually missing from two.
I was rounding up.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Sat Jul 15, 2017 3:48 pm
by Jimmbo
I've spent all day researching and strategizing my purchases for the biannual Barnes and Noble Criterion sale (decided on these: Stalker, Walkabout, Don't Look Now, Safe, and Naked). BTW, here are my tips for newbies interested in the sale, including a couple of counterintuitive suggestions).

I'm trying to research one final issue, but I'm too fried! Can anyone help?

I own "The Decalogue" 3-DVD box set from FACETS. Is the "Dekalog" edition from Criterion the same material? If so, is there any compelling reason to upgrade (aside from the opportunity to go HD/blu-ray)?

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Sun Jul 16, 2017 7:10 pm
by zedz
Jimmbo wrote:I've spent all day researching and strategizing my purchases for the biannual Barnes and Noble Criterion sale (decided on these: Stalker, Walkabout, Don't Look Now, Safe, and Naked). BTW, here are my tips for newbies interested in the sale, including a couple of counterintuitive suggestions).

I'm trying to research one final issue, but I'm too fried! Can anyone help?

I own "The Decalogue" 3-DVD box set from FACETS. Is the "Dekalog" edition from Criterion the same material? If so, is there any compelling reason to upgrade (aside from the opportunity to go HD/blu-ray)?
The films being watchable is kind of a big one. (The old Facets release wasn't as bad as Facets got, but that's not much of a bar to clear!)

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Sun Jul 16, 2017 7:36 pm
by MichaelB
Night and day difference.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Thu Mar 08, 2018 6:53 am
by jdj
I went region free recently, and I'm very interested in picking this up (especially for the films not available on the Criterion release). However, reading through this thread and elsewhere, I'm not sure if it'll play properly on my system. I'm far from tech savy when it comes to TVs. I have the region free Seiki player, so there should be no problem on that end. What happens if my TV isn't compatible with 1080/50i? Will it not work at all, or just look weird? Also, is it common for most TVs in the US to not be compatible?

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Thu Mar 08, 2018 12:13 pm
by cdnchris
The Seiki converts the signal to 60hz so your TV is fine.

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Wed Mar 20, 2019 10:44 am
by Marwood
Does anyone know if the new cheaper re-release from Arrow are the same blu-ray discs as in the previous set, just without the DVDs?

Re: Dekalog and Other Television Works

Posted: Wed Mar 20, 2019 10:50 am
by MichaelB
No - it’s just Dekalog itself and extras specifically relating to it (Tony Rayns’ piece, for instance). All the other Kieślowski TV productions plus relevant extras remain exclusive to the limited edition.

This is why it’s now on three discs rather than five.