Well, colorization quality in this documentary vary from scene top scene. I bet more than one company was hired, or some scenes was neer deadline and was pushed to finish quickly. In theory it can be quite better with more budget, but such documentaries have a limited cash for this.
But there are still quite nice scenes in color for this one.
The Ford-T cars, painted black, looks right, but some cars that was like sandpapered, looking like crude metal (like Laurel & Hard Ford-T sandpapered to avoid reflex showing camera crew) was colorized green, and looked not real. I'm curious to know it the "sandpappered texture" cars had painting or not. In movies that portrait the 20's, all Ford cars that had colors was smooth in surface.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/ ... _P3761.jpgI wish in the WWI documentaries where they used real color footage, they could try to balance better the colors, color correct, since most times color footage was pushed to blue, purple, sometimes yellowed, or low saturation. It would be better with fine natural colors.
wich2 wrote:All Darc wrote:Turn off the color is you dislike colorization.
In such cases, there is NO valid beef - even from "purists."
The world has always existed in color. And this type of work - researched well, and done carefully - is a perfect venue for modern-quality colorization.
-Craig