Sailor Moon R Movie
Created/Updated 2001-04-20
- Catalog Number : PISA-0001V
- Manufacturer : Pioneer
- Series : Sailor Moon
- Printing Date : N/A
- Region : 1
- Price : N/A
- Play Time : 80 minutes
- Number of Discs : 1
- Number of Sides per Disc : 1
- Number of Layers (side1) : 1
- Number of Layers (side2) : N/A
- Audio1 : English Dolby Digital 2ch
- Audio2 : Japanese Dolby Digital 2ch (Mono dialogs)
- Audio3 : N/A
- Audio4 : N/A
- Audio5 : N/A
- Subtitle1 : English
- Subtitle2 : N/A
- Subtitle3 : N/A
- Subtitle4 : N/A
- Subtitle5 : N/A
Animephile Rating: F (2.5)
- Video Scan Type : interlaced-Movie (-5.0) -
dTV can detect 3:2 pulldown for certain blocks and then not at all for others.
It might have something to do with the strange blending I see.
- Aspect Handling : standard (-0.0) -
Apparently, it was shot 4:3 ratio even though it was a theatrical feature. No
complaints there.
- Compression : -1.0 -
I don't think there's too much compression problems, but.... (see Other)
- Video Separation : -1.0
- Scene Transition : -0.0
- Calibration : -0.0 -
See "Other."
- Other : -0.5 -
It's got that LD composite feel. Perhaps I'm being mean by subtracting more
points since it is an old movie. It wouldn't be worth the time and effort to
re-master it.
Comments:
All in all, I think they've done a fair job. NOT! It wouldn't be like me not
to complain. :)
Look for the LD-composite feel from the image. The soft, vertical blocks
aren't MPEG compression related. It's low-resolution composite format
related. It is a PNG file with lossless compression. It's almost 300kB!
In the second image, look at the interlacing on the bottom left of the image,
but not elsewhere. Field changes happen at different times depending on
where things are. I don't know how that happened, but it's as if they used
partial blending at times to make this DVD. BTW, the first time I saw that
scene, which was a LONG time ago, I thought, "Minako-chan's COOL!"
Images: