DB7, Smudge, Rob Compton, & other members,
thanks for your replies. I'll try and answer all your points.
DB7, you don't sound like an old Ealing film, your comments are very valid and I appreciate
what you've said. I'm not going to be transferring my VHS tapes to DVD as the quality as you
say would just be a Digital VHS, no point really. What I plan on doing is recording on DVD all
the British rare films.
The result is a preserved Digital recording with over 500+ lines of resolution.
[video is 240 lines].On the DVD recorder there is also a function which allows me to 'fit' a
recording across the whole DVD disc which would increase the already pristine quality
to more lines of resolution.
Private messages are great things but not all the message users can see what's going on.
I suggest that everyone who has a favourite film[s] should just shout from the roof top in this
message thread and post away with the film[s] that they want.
I have no intention of making any profit, I'm not a scoundrel :) . Profit = illegal and I'm not into
that. I guess that it would cost, what, 5 quid for the film on DVD, with artwork maybe.
Encased in a sturdy DVD case, and postage and packaging would be included. the cost of
the disc. 5 quid is clear that I wouldn't be making a profit from it. And besides, its up to the
people out there in this forum.
There's been talk in another message that Ealing's DVD boxset, with Dead Of Night included has
a terrible picture quality

. This is strange as Film Four I'm sure used to show a beautiful print.
That on a DVD-R would be preserved in pristine quality with Dolby Digital 2.0 audio [not mono!].
I'd only be recording the classic British films that are hard-to-find and rare. Off the TV, no VHS
conversions, they'd all be completely Digital recordings. BBC 2 recently showed a print of Henry
VIII And His Six Wives [the film, not the TV series]. The last time I saw that was when I was a kid!.
It was even in Widescreen 1.85:1. I'll have u all know that I'm a young film fan [22] with a vast
appreciation for the classic films.
A good point is some of these films are already available on DVD, so I'd have no point recording
them, and I won't. I intend to record the films that have been shamessly DELETED and the films
that have never been released on DVD to buy, and films that have only been released on dodgy
VHS. Also, there are loads of old British classics that haven't ever been released.
Off the top of my head, I'll spout out 6 films I want to record on DVD:
House Of Secrets
RARE, never released to buy. Amazing espionage film from the 50's. Was a Digitally Remastered
print and was an early prototype to the bond films, especially Goldfinger.
Hell Drivers
Super rare and DELETED, everyone knows this one. The very definition of a classic British film.
Used to be shown a lot on C4, turned up last on BBC 2 in a Digitally Remastered form in it's
original VistaVison Widescreen Aspect Ratio of 1.85:1. It was beautiful, that's one I deffinately
want to record on DVD the next time they show it. There was an australian original VHS of this
film on an Amazon auction for over 50 dollars!, scandalous.
The Good Die Young
Only released on DD Video [cheap]. Stunning British Noir with Laurence Harvey, Stanley Baker
and Richard Baseheart. I love this film, it's a stunner. C4 show this film.
Footsteps In The Fog
This is one of my favs. A melodrama thriller in the tradition of Gaslight in colour. Stewart Granger's
best film, did he or did he not kill his last wife?, and will he kill his maid servant that has fallen in
love with him. A score to outscore Bernard Herrmann, it's a real Hitchcockian suspenser. Was
shown on C4 in Widescreen 1.85:1.
The Day My Number Came Up
I just saw this one this week and I was left breathless. The whole film I was on the edge of my seat
and left in constant suspense. This one is RARE. Great cast, story about premonition and a man
who has a dream about a plane crash and tells his friends [who just happen to be flying the next
day] Will it come true or not? Superb performance by Alexander Knox. This film was way ahead
of it's time and ranks along with Dead Of Night for the premonition segment.
The Long Memory
John Mills is the innocent man who just gets out of prison and swears vengeance on the people
responsible for his sentence. This one is the definitive english noir with superb direction and camera
work. It's a film I'll never forget.
So there's 6 films I love, only one of which is available on VHS.
The DVD recorder that I'm going to buy is the new Panasonic DMR-E50 DVD Recorder / Player.
It's a beauty, with Progressive Scan for superb resolution.
And the plan is none profit, purely collector-to-collector based. Why should people be stuck with
watching VHS recordings?.
And unlike the crap Sony and Phillips DVD recorders, the Pansonic allows me to record on normal
[non Sony/Phillips] DVD-R discs. Not the brand DVD-R+ which are a rip off and non compatible
with any DVD player except Sony/Phillips. You can even play these DVD-R discs on a PS2 and an
X-BOX apparently. That's how compatible they are.
A film is as rare as a person wants it to be. The above films are rare, even though you can get The
Good Die Young on VHS, I still class it as rare because you cannot buy it in Digital DVD quality.
A film like Ice Cold In Alex isn't rare as you can buy it in Digital DVD quality. 5 out of the 6 films I've
mentioned have never been released in any format, and 2 of the 5 prints are in Widescreen. I've
been constantly let down by pan and scan fullframe prints on VHS. I have no intention of buying a
VHS ever again. My idea is to buy a bulk-lot of DVD-R's [100's!], and record a minimum of 3 British
films a week that are on UK TV. If there are six rare films being shown that sound classic and are
rare, I'll record them on DVD. I plan on having a huge collection of these films for myself and for
other collectors who are interested in the specific titles. It's all up to you, I'm not fussed either way.
But we all have our favourites, and a lot of them are rare.
I think it would be a wicked idea for members to post in this thread, the films that they really want
to see. I'll keep a look out for all the films on TV and record them for u.
More comments will be great. Cheers.