Seems on the verge of being overlit the eyes in the last image are more of a focal point in the original, while in the remaster you get distracted with a lot of air-brushy detail and shading on the face. Side issue: while the added clarity is nice, I'm not sure the makeup effects benefit from this. You can't get that added resolution from a dvd or youtube source. The version shown in theatres was a high-end conversion created from 4k scans of the original negative. Maybe there's someone out there who could take the existing video and do their own conversion, but that would be a tremendous amount of effort, and the video master that's available isn't high quality to begin with. In the case of Thriller, that's not going to be possible, because it's a conversion. ![]() You need two separate sources for left and right eye to recombine, as was the case with Friday the 13th. ![]() ![]() It'd be nice if there were a way around every 3D home video omission, but in this case it's not possible. Can someone explain the logic for releasing this in 3d in theatres,and then ignoring a home video release? We need that awesome person, who made the awesome Friday the 13th part 3 3d ,to make this.
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