View Full Version : Universal Celebrates 100th Anniv. w/ New Logo and 13 Film Restorations


JamesG
01-10-2012, 02:53 PM
Universal Celebrates 100th Birthday with New Logo and 13 Film Restorations
1/10/2012
by Tim Appelo


On Jan. 10, Universal Pictures celebrated its 100th anniversary (which is on Apr. 30) by unveiling a new logo and announcing a restoration of 13 of its iconic films:

All Quiet on the Western Front
The Birds
Abbott and Costello's Buck Privates
Dracula (1931)
the Spanish-language Dracula filmed on the same set at night
Frankenstein
Jaws
Schindler's List
Out of Africa
Pillow Talk
Bride of Frankenstein
The Sting
To Kill a Mockingbird







The restorations, which will be released throughout the studio's year-long centennial celebration, took three to six months each and cost $250,000 to $600,000 per title, Universal SVP, Technical Operations Michael Daruty told The Hollywood Reporter and others at a sneak preview of the extraordinarily impressive results on the studio lot on Dec. 1.

"This restoration effort was not about marketability and whether we're gonna sell enough DVDs," said Daruty.

"That is what we do on a daily basis, but this was a commitment by the company to say, 'We're gonna devote funding and most probably continue that effort year over year, to try and preserve and restore the legacy of the company. We're here to spend the money on these 13 titles and some others, whether we're gonna get our money back in that first year or not.' It's really refreshing."







"It is a profit driver, so supporting the DVD/Blu-ray business is of great importance," says Meyer.

"There will be a number of films in collectible book style packaging with memorabilia. It's an area for us to frankly show off and give the audience something they've never seen before."



Daruty's team proved Meyer right by showing horrifying damage magically repaired in the coming releases. In Universal's classic monster cinema (which you can expect to see promoted next Halloween), loud hisses, pops, and crackles vanish, making scary footsteps audible.

To Kill a Mockingbird loses the appalling graininess in a courtroom closeup.

In Out of Africa, Meryl Streep loses a weird wobble in her walk possibly caused by projectors that enlarged the sprocket holes.

Pillow Talk erupts with dazzling color and detail.

Jaws practically bites your nose off.







Meyer promises parades in Universals Orlando theme park, tours of the company's remarkable archives, and promotions at major film festivals, maybe with talent in attendance.

"A hundred years is a real milestone," says Meyer. "And, I mean, what could be more important than movies? Seriously!"

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/universal-100th-birthday-logo-279955

MrCleveland
01-10-2012, 03:45 PM
I also heard Universal's Mascot, Woody Woodpecker, will be having a film of his own!

Reverend Jim
01-10-2012, 05:39 PM
Universal Celebrates 100th Birthday with New Logo and 13 Film Restorations
1/10/2012
by Tim Appelo


On Jan. 10, Universal Pictures celebrated its 100th anniversary (which is on Apr. 30) by unveiling a new logo and announcing a restoration of 13 of its iconic films:

All Quiet on the Western Front
The Birds
Abbott and Costello's Buck Privates
Dracula (1931)
the Spanish-language Dracula filmed on the same set at night
Frankenstein
Jaws
Schindler's List
Out of Africa
Pillow Talk
Bride of Frankenstein
The Sting
To Kill a Mockingbird







The restorations, which will be released throughout the studio's year-long centennial celebration, took three to six months each and cost $250,000 to $600,000 per title, Universal SVP, Technical Operations Michael Daruty told The Hollywood Reporter and others at a sneak preview of the extraordinarily impressive results on the studio lot on Dec. 1.

"This restoration effort was not about marketability and whether we're gonna sell enough DVDs," said Daruty.

"That is what we do on a daily basis, but this was a commitment by the company to say, 'We're gonna devote funding and most probably continue that effort year over year, to try and preserve and restore the legacy of the company. We're here to spend the money on these 13 titles and some others, whether we're gonna get our money back in that first year or not.' It's really refreshing."







"It is a profit driver, so supporting the DVD/Blu-ray business is of great importance," says Meyer.

"There will be a number of films in collectible book style packaging with memorabilia. It's an area for us to frankly show off and give the audience something they've never seen before."



Daruty's team proved Meyer right by showing horrifying damage magically repaired in the coming releases. In Universal's classic monster cinema (which you can expect to see promoted next Halloween), loud hisses, pops, and crackles vanish, making scary footsteps audible.

To Kill a Mockingbird loses the appalling graininess in a courtroom closeup.

In Out of Africa, Meryl Streep loses a weird wobble in her walk possibly caused by projectors that enlarged the sprocket holes.

Pillow Talk erupts with dazzling color and detail.

Jaws practically bites your nose off.







Meyer promises parades in Universals Orlando theme park, tours of the company's remarkable archives, and promotions at major film festivals, maybe with talent in attendance.

"A hundred years is a real milestone," says Meyer. "And, I mean, what could be more important than movies? Seriously!"

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/universal-100th-birthday-logo-279955
http://i44.tinypic.com/2qd7why.jpg

comedyfreak
01-11-2012, 06:43 AM
I already have the classic Universal monster movies who cares if you can hear footsteps. The other films mentioned I don't have so I may pick them up.