
Also, I was wondering what the differences are on that versus the new Blu-Ray that came out, because I read that that was the new film source, but the audio track would be back to mono. Why is that?
Moderators: Evil James, EvilDeadChainsaws
I used the 1985 Japanese 'Herald Videogram' Laserdisc mono audio as it seemed to be the only true mono audio track source available. That is to say, the audio as it was originally mixed. 'Remixed to stereo or 5.1' didn't just mean taking the mono audio elements and panning some of the effects to the left or right speakers. In places the bass and treble levels were in stark contrast and some of the effects and musical elements had been mixed at differing levels in relation to each other to accentuate certain instruments. The section around 28:21 (NTSC) is a good example; As Cheryl runs from the woods up to the cabin door, the background music simply stops in the original mono track, but fades out in both the DVD & Blu-ray versions. Another is around 41:40 where Scotty looks out of the broken cabin window. The wolves howling off in the distance are quite loud in the mono track, but are much quieter in relation to the cabin ambiance/wind in the Blu-ray, and had been removed all together from the 1999 Elite DVD.I read that that was the new film source, but the audio track would be back to mono. Why is that?
Please contact me if you want a copy. Obviously I can't send out free DVDs to everyone who asks; Uk to USA postage alone for one of my Book Of The Dead DVDs is $4.01, ad in two Verbatim full-face printable dual layer DVDs (another $1.52), the padded envelope, the two-way DVD case, the printed cover, and you're talking $7 a time for one home-made DVD! It all adds up. What I normally do is see what sort of stuff people have to trade, that can be anything from copies of DVD/VHS material, magazines, etc, or if not, I can nominate a retail DVD which they could buy for me which would be a suitable trade for my costs.I was wondering if there was some way to get ahold of this.