Why is this allowed?
Noise is part of film. Motion blur is part of film. I hate these fucking people who think it has to look identical to real life.
>>81680168
Some grading looks pretty good because it cuts down on the artificial glare of studio lights
They fucked up the Matrix pretty good when they went from DVD to blu-ray too. They greened out all the Matrix parts so it would match the sequels. Trying to match the original Matrix to the sequels ... it's like a man wearing a dress
>>81680143
>>81680168
>>81680338
(((Our))) focus groups said it made the film look more like popular blockbusters.
>>81680143
>>81680168
>>81680338
It is blatantly obvious that they're just trying to make them look less white.
They're trying to influence society by making it more 'normal' to see people who aren't properly white.
They're trying to make the blatant affects of immigration and race mixing less obvious.
Just a typical Jewish trick desu.
If only the Anglos were the rulers of the big banks then the world would be in a far better place.
>>81680693
lol
>>81680644
>>81680693
>>81680768
Continue to live in ignorance mon ami.
When the dark times come you will probably still blame the white man for his 'isms'.
I only hope that you have the luxury of lasting long enough to learn the errors of your ways.
Until then, enjoy the benefits of western civilisation whilst you still can.
>>81680338
>>81680168
>>81680143
are you fucking kidding me?
gross
>>81681025
That one actually makes sense. The first few Harry Potters were warm and pretty bright; the series got darker and greenish (it looks a bit green to me, I dunno) as the tone darkened. The last scene is supposed to be happy and fulfilling, so why shouldn't the colour grade suit it?
>>81681156
>happy ending should be dark and green too because rest of movie is depressing
Why?
>>81680338
>let's make a movie set in the Arctic warmer
>>81681156
>The last scene is supposed to be happy and fulfilling
Well they all look miserable
Studios fuck with the grading of home releases all the time. It's often subtle, but occasionally you get fucks like Cameron, Scott, and Carpenter (though some of it is probably the cinematographer's fault) completely changing the grading of movies like Aliens, The Thing, etc. In terms of the more subtle ones, I recall seeing a 35mm scan of Jurassic Park a few years ago on a torrent, and while some of it is due to the age of the print, the image is slightly more orange and tinted, though not to the point of the OP image.
Pic related is the 35mm screenshot.
>>81681725
One other thing - you also have to keep in mind that 99% of TVs aren't properly calibrated (overly vibrant w/ all those 'real color' settings and improper color temp - look up how to calibrate your TV to D65/6500k color temperature, it tends to look more orange-yellow for the first couple days but then it just seems natural - the cinema preset is often closer to this, and in projectors the cinema mode should be 6500k out of the box), so occasionally you'll see a home release overly tinted so that it'll look closer to intended on what studios think is the average TV.
>>81681725
>>81681851
Quality posts.