download halloween 1978 extended version Download halloween 1978 extended version. Completing the CAPTCHA proves you are a human and gives you temporary access to the web property. What can I do to prevent this in the future? If you are on a personal connection, like at home, you can run an anti-virus scan on your device to make sure it is not infected with malware. If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices. Another way to prevent getting this page in the future is to use Privacy Pass. You may need to download version 2.0 now from the Chrome Web Store. Cloudflare Ray ID: 66c5681479350d4e • Your IP : 188.246.226.140 • Performance & security by Cloudflare. JOHN CARPENTER'S HALLOWEEN: THE COMPLETE EXTENDED EDITION (Released) _**Surprise! A little project we have been working on is complete. This project is for new or hardcore Halloween fans. We hope you like it! JOHN CARPENTER’S HALLOWEEN: THE COMPLETE EXTENDED EDITION. What is it About: A complete cut of John Carpenter’s Halloween (1978), with all television footage reintegrated, including a rare title, and with all theatrical footage having the Dean Cundey-approved coloring from the THX master DVD. Plus a choice between the original mono audio and 5.1 surround. Original Film Name: John Carpenter’s Halloween. New Film Name: John Carpenter’s Halloween: The Complete Extended Edition. Creative Consultant: Nighthawks / OldBiff85. Original Film Was Released: 25 October 1978 (USA) Date Edit Was Released: February 2009. Original Runtime: 91 minutes. New Runtime: 101 minutes. Amount of Time Cut/Added: 10 minutes added. 1. All television scenes, in anamorphic widescreen, have been reintegrated. 2. The missing title sequences “Smith’s Grove, Illinois” and “May 1964”, which were featured on televsion before the psychiatric hearing, but are missing from the other extended DVD’s, have finally been reintegrated, carefully converted to conform to the size of the other Anamorphic Widescreen titles, cleaned, and restored. These are the ACTUAL titles, not a re-creation. To retain the theatrical version’s flow, the title “Smith’s Grove, Illinois” is still shown before Loomis’s ride in the rain. 3. The theatrical scenes are from the Cundey-approved THX 1999 Theatrical DVD. No other release, not even the Blu-Ray, has been approved by Cundey. Day scenes look like Autumn, night scenes have the creepy bluish colors, etc. 4. All scenes match, and there are no aspect ratio mis-matches or different-colored letterbox bars. 5. You have a choice between 5.1 surround sound and the original mono mix. These audio selections are from the hi-definition masterings. The mono television scenes have been converted to 5.1 for the 5.1 surround mix. 3. 5.1 / 2.0 Audio Selection. 4. Chapter Selection. Hardware and software information (what did you use to create your fanedit): Sony Vegas, Photoshop, AfterEffects, Audition, DVDLabPro, BeSweet, GordianKnot, Eac3To, DVDLabPro. Your Intention for this Fanedit: To construct a version of John Carpenter’s Halloween that includes all known footage, and has the proper coloring that was approved by Director John Carpenter and Director of Photography Dean Cundey. Time Needed for the Edition: One month. Remember, Highlander, you’ve both still got your full measure of life. Use it well, and your future will be glorious. Author dark_jedi Time 24-Feb-2009 12:26 PM (Edited) Post link. So the onyl real difference is the title card and the 5.1 audio? This 11 minute Extended version is available on the Limited Edition 2 disc set,and can you post screens,I would like to see the quality if that is ok,motion menu's,extended movie,2.0 & 5.1 audio,seems alot for a 3.69GB SL Disc to me. but thanks for the work. Author ReverendBeastly Time 24-Feb-2009 1:11 PM Post link. I think the main attraction here is the proper color timing, which is why I'm going to be grabbing this. I used to be very active on this forum. I’m not really anymore. Hi everybody. You’re all awesome. Keep up the good work. Author dark_jedi Time 24-Feb-2009 1:19 PM (Edited) Post link. ReverendBeastly said: I think the main attraction here is the proper color timing, which is why I'm going to be grabbing this. The correct color timing is on the THX 2 Disc Collector's Edition. and this set has the 5.1 audio on the Theatrical cut,just not the Television cut,so is the title card the only difference here? I still would love to see screens of this,I still think that is an awful lot of info crammed into 3.69GB's. Here is the set I am talking about RB: And I am not trying to knock this,just trying to understand what is so "special" about this when all this is already on the above set. I am a HUGE Halloween Fan(hell I have done 2 Halloween edits myself),I have bought almost ALL editions put out,just trying to see if I want to grab this or not,so I am just trying to clarify a few things is all. Author dark_jedi Time 24-Feb-2009 3:26 PM (Edited) Post link. "1. All television scenes, in anamorphic widescreen, have been reintegrated." So where exactly did these scenes come from? the same set that you got the Theatrical cut from perhaps? "4. All scenes match, and there are no aspect ratio mis-matches or different-colored letterbox bars." There shouldn't be LOL,these 2 cuts are on the same set in the same aspect ratio enhanced for widescreen TV's. Bring on some screens PLEASE. Author phineasbg Time 24-Feb-2009 9:51 PM (Edited) Post link. The coloring of the official widescreen Extended Edition is a little different from the THX Theatrical. Not much, but a bit. The bitrate for the movie is the same as the bitrate of the original DVD, that's why the size seems a little small. It's still larger than the original DVD because I encoded it to err on the "higher quality" side. Some Halloween fans complained about aspect ratio differences, so I felt I should mention it. If you put the extra scenes from the official Extended Edition DVD directly into the theatrical DVD scenes, the letterbox bars aren't in exactly the same place. So I reconstructed the formatting of the letterbox bars from the ground up, so it all matches. The 5.1 audio is not available on the official Extended Edition DVD, only the theatrical cut. So I added that option as a bonus for people who like that audio. If you already have the Theatrical THX, that's what the theatrical scenes looks like. There's no loss in quality. But yes, the main difference is the titles. Now when it cuts to Smith's Grove, it's not harsh like on the official Extended Edition. It's a gentler transition like on the NBC version. Author dark_jedi Time 24-Feb-2009 10:19 PM Post link. 1 thing I noticed right off the bat is this,where you did the 5.1 upmix on the TV scenes you should of boosted the speech volume,it is waaaay lower than the normal scenes,very drastic,especially on a high end sound system(so for me,this is not good,but that is me,maybe noone else cares),and I want to look at the picture more,it does look a little soft,but I will look more into that tomorrow. But hey,you did the work and that's cool,but the sound level problem alone is enough to keep me on the original sound(not the 5.1),hopefully no level drops there,I have not checked that out yet,will tomorrow. The 4:3 menu's are pretty cool,why not 16:9 menu's? Author phineasbg Time 25-Feb-2009 1:15 AM (Edited) Post link. dark_jedi said: 1 thing I noticed right off the bat is this,where you did the 5.1 upmix on the TV scenes you should of boosted the speech volume,it is waaaay lower than the normal scenes,very drastic,especially on a high end sound system(so for me,this is not good,but that is me,maybe noone else cares),and I want to look at the picture more,it does look a little soft,but I will look more into that tomorrow. But hey,you did the work and that’s cool,but the sound level problem alone is enough to keep me on the original sound(not the 5.1),hopefully no level drops there,I have not checked that out yet,will tomorrow. The 4:3 menu’s are pretty cool,why not 16:9 menu’s? The extra scenes are dialogue only, so I used other dialogue-only scenes as a reference for sound levels. Dialogue is on the center channel only, where it’s supposed to be for 5.1 (I didn’t spread it on all the other channels like some people do). The center levels are the same. All that’s on the other channels is ambience. Theatrical THX DVD is soft compared to the Divimax. That’s why I wish we’d get a Cundey-approved Blu-Ray. I didn’t use a 16:9 menu because in my experience, encoding a DVD-R with a 4:3 motion menu tends to cause less problems with most standalone DVD players.
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