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"The Searchers" Restored by Warner
Brothers and Released in 70mm
4K Digital Restoration & HDR Remaster.
Summary & Notes. |
Read more at
in70mm.com The 70mm Newsletter
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Contributors to this story:
Margaret Bodde, Jan Yarbrough, Miles DelHoyo,
Doug Mountain, Daphne Dentz. Special thanks to: David Mortimer &
Christopher Reyna. |
Date:
15.04.2024 |
Bill
Gold's original art work for the 1-sheet poster for "The Searchers"
(as seen on Wikipedia)
World Premiere. Egyptian Theatre,
Hollywood, USA. Sunday, April 21, 2024. 3:15 pm - 5:30 pm, 119m, 70mm
World premiere restoration courtesy of Warner Bros. Classics. Restored by
Warner Bros. in collaboration with the Film Foundation.
Thomas Hauerslev, in70mm.com: Tell me about the new restoration of John Ford’s
“The Searchers” –
how did it come about?
Margaret Bodde, Managing Director, and Daphne Dentz, SVP Mastering WBD:
There’s a multi-year collaboration with The Film Foundation and
TCM to remaster and restore classic films from WBD’s rich library. Robyn
Sklaren, SVP of Sales Planning, Library Management and Daphne Dentz, SVP
Mastering manage this process with Margaret Bodde, Executive Director
and Jennifer Ahn, Managing Director from The Film Foundation. As we
discussed plans for 2024, Margaret mentioned the board’s interest in
"The
Searchers" given the ability to scan VistaVision and we started
exploring the possibility of full scale 6k restoration that included a
70mm print.
• Go to "The Searchers"
VistaVision Scan Samples
• Go to “The
Searchers”: The 70mm Presentations
THa: In what condition did you find the negatives and sound elements -
Were they mint condition / faded / deteriorated / shrunken?
Jan Yarbrough, Senior Colorist: The Vistavision Original Camera
Negative was in good condition as far as physical damage. Two issues we
commonly run into with restoration projects are film shrinkage (which
makes it difficult to scan the film); and color dye instability,
especially in blue/yellow color layers. The OCN suffered from both of
these. The abnormal amount of shrinkage made it hard to keep a stable
image, while all of the color layers suffered from dye fading with the
blue/yellow layer being extremely bad. In some shots the layer was so
faded that the color was missing entirely. To solve this issue, it was
decided to scan the blue separation master and use it to replace the OCN
blue/yellow layer. (Separation masters are separate monochrome film
images that represent the luminance values of the red green blue primary
colors in the image). Image registration of the new blue channel proved
difficult due to the differences in shrinkage between the OCN (red &
green) and the Sep Master (blue). Color dye instability also caused a
great amount of image flicker which we corrected for.
THa: What was the most significant challenges during this restoration -
considering 8-perf film, hardware to view, scan and run the prints?
Jan Yarbrough, Senior Colorist: Using two very different film
sources (OCN & Seps) made it difficult to get an even balance of color
between skin tones and the natural beauty of the exterior desert.
THa: Can you explain the scanning process of the original VV negatives?
Miles DelHoyo, WBD Mastering Supervisor: The 4K restoration of
John Ford’s 1956 film, "The
Searchers", was sourced from a scan of the
original camera negative (OCN) which is in the 8 perf 35mm VistaVision
format. The full frame scanning resolution was ~13K (horizontal) which
was made by scanning each frame in half (4 perf) at 6.5K and then
digitally stitching the two halves together to create the full
VistaVision original frame.
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More in 70mm reading:
in70mm.com's page about VistaVision
"The Searchers" - 70mm Screening at the
Aero, Santa Monica, CA, USA
"The Searchers" VistaVision Scan Samples
“The Searchers”: The 70mm
Presentations
"North By Northwest"
in 70mm at the Tribeca Festival
70mm Blow Up List
2024 - by in70mm.com
"The Negative" - VistaVision
Strikes Back
The Making of ‘Ellston Bay’
Horizontal VistaVision
Projector
Berg der Kinoträume: Paramounts VistaVision
“In VistaVision, Technicolor and Perspecta sound” 6-7 Juni 2009
Restoration of
"Vertigo"
Theo Gluck - A
Master Class in Film Restoration
Die
Cinerama-Archäologen
The Cinerama
Archaeologists
in70mm.com's Library
Presented on the big screen in 7OMM
Peripheral Vision, Scopes,
Dimensions and Panoramas |
"The
Searchers" main title card. Compressed JPEG of the final result. Courtesy:
Warner Bros. Motion Picture
Imaging.
THa: Any parts missing from the film and what were the surprises - scenes
or soundtrack – alternate takes, missing pieces or titles, any need for
B/W separations?
Jan Yarbrough, Senior Colorist: In the process of replacing the
blue channel with the blue sep, we discovered that approx. 11:35 into
reel 01 the sep was off by a perforation for one shot, which shifted the
image horizontally. The design of the set background makes it difficult
to notice, so this error is in the previous video master. It’s fixed in
the new master.
THa: What kind of work did the soundtrack require – remixing to stereo and
perhaps re-recording foley, sound and music?
How is the new soundtrack created- mono/stereo/6-track DTS- were Max
Steiner’s orchestral recording sessions available?
Doug Mountain, Sound Supervisor / Mixer: A full forensic cleanup of
all pops, ticks, and dropouts was done. The overall noise was also
reduced to make the dialog more present. Some missing sound effects were
added back in. When John Wayne cocks his gun during the shootout with
Indians across the river the sound of the gun was missing. The rumble of
the wind on the boom mic was removed or reduced on the exterior scenes
to better understand the dialog. It was a mono original restored from a
composition source in mono. No stems were available to remix from, and
for this film it was deemed unnecessary to deviate from the original
monaural presentation. The original monaural audio mix has also been
restored from the best available sources, resulting in a clean and clear
sound presentation for today’s digital theater systems. The original
music was not available so only the mono composite mix was restored.
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"The
Searchers" VistaVision title card. Compressed JPEG of the final result.
Courtesy: Warner Bros.
Motion Picture Imaging.
THa: How does it look in 70mm / 4k digital compared to the original
release?
Jan Yarbrough, Senior Colorist, and Daphne Dentz, SVP Mastering WBD:
The HDR and 70mm versions each reveal more detail than audiences would
have seen in the original release, which would have involved printing in
35mm from optical duplicate negatives made from the VistaVision source.
Working directly from the original camera negative posed challenges due
to some inherent limitations in the source photography and offered
abundant opportunities to breathe new life into the imagery. The 70mm
version, limited to what can be reproduced in a film pipeline, is
arguably closer to what audiences in 1956 would have seen on screen,
minus all the artifacts associated with the lab processes and
duplicating stocks of the era. The HDR version is simply breathtaking.
THa: How are the old and new film elements stored? (also stored at United
States Library of Congress since 1989)?
Daphne Dentz, SVP Mastering WBD: Film is held at WBD controlled
vaults including on the Burbank lot. SEPS geographically are separated
from OCN and held at an offsite vault across the country. New film will
be vaulted at appropriate WBD vault based on asset type.
THa: Can you explain how the 70mm prints were made - digital output -
keeping the full AR (1,85:1 or 1,66:1) of "The
Searchers" inside pillar
boxed 70mm (like "Vertigo")?
Daphne Dentz, SVP Mastering WBD: The 1.85:1 projection
aperture image was placed within the 2.2:1 70mm/5 perf projection
aperture, preserving the full image on screen, pillar boxed in the same
way that other recent 1.85 70mm titles have been handled in the past.
The source files were P3 6K and filmed out at FotoKem. Audio encoding
and DTS track negative were handled by Inventure Studios.
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"The
Searchers" John Wayne. Compressed JPEG of the final result. Courtesy:
Warner Bros. Motion Picture
Imaging.
THa: Will 70mm prints be available for exhibition at 70mm cinemas in
Europe?
We will be making the 70mm available to exhibition in North America,
with plans to roll out to International markets.
THa: Will "The
Searchers" be released for home viewing on 4K disc?
No release planned just yet.
THa: Are there any frame scans of before and after positive and negatives
available for publication?
We will create a before and after demo at a later date.
THa: Is there any official press available about the restoration,
production info, a new poster lay out etc?
Not just yet other than the TCM Film Festival announcement.
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Restoration Credits
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Danish
premiere of “The Searchers” 24. July 1957 (running until 11. August 1957) at
the Saga cinema in Copenhagen. Premiere advertisements even mention
VistaVision.
•
Restoration completed by: WBD Post Production Creative Services
(Motion Picture Imaging and WB Sound Burbank).
• Picture Restoration Facility: WB Motion Picture Imaging.
• Senior Colorist: Jan Yarbrough.
• Sound Supervisor/Mixer: Doug Mountain.
• Finished Picture Formats: 4k UHD HDR, Digital Cinema & 70mm
prints.
• Finished Sound Format: Monaural.
• WBD Mastering Supervisor: Miles DelHoyo.
• Project Timeline: October 2023 – March 2024
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About "The Searchers"
Text from Wikipedia:
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Danish
premiere of “The Searchers” 24. July 1957 (running until 11. August 1957) at
the Saga cinema in Copenhagen. Premiere advertisements even mention VistaVision.
The Searchers is a 1956 American epic Western film directed by John Ford and
written by Frank S. Nugent, based on the 1954 novel by Alan Le May. It is
set during the Texas–Indian wars, and stars John Wayne as a middle-aged
Civil War veteran who spends years looking for his abducted niece (Natalie
Wood), accompanied by his adopted nephew (Jeffrey Hunter). It was shot in
VistaVision on Eastmancolor negative with processing and prints by
Technicolor.
The film was a critical and commercial success. Since its release, it has
come to be considered a masterpiece and one of the greatest and most
influential films ever made. It was named the greatest American Western by
the American Film Institute in 2008, and it placed 12th on the same
organization's 2007 list of the 100 greatest American movies of all time.
Entertainment Weekly also named it the best Western. The British Film
Institute's Sight & Sound magazine ranked it as the seventh-best film of all
time based on a 2012 international survey of film critics and in 2008, the
French magazine Cahiers du Cinéma ranked "The
Searchers" number 10 in their
list of the 100 best films ever made.
In 1989, "The
Searchers" was deemed "culturally, historically, or
aesthetically significant" by the United States Library of Congress, and
selected for preservation in its National Film Registry; it was one of the
first 25 films selected for the registry.
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• Go to "The Searchers" Restored
and Released in 70mm
• Go to
"The Searchers" VistaVision Scan
Examples |
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