Sony G90 Down Primrose Path Toward Perfect Vision Forever?, At all. So it doesn’t take Hdtv or

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Down the

Primrose Path

Toward Perfect

Vision Forever?

Editor:

I’ve been with TPV since the first issue,

and was thankful, even delighted, when

you covered the remaining issues on my

subscription from five years back. That’s

perfect honesty. Now that you know my

credentials, here’s my wish list, which I

hope will help you keep your focus on

the perfect vision:

1.Reviews must be brutal in their

criticism of any company whose

film transfer falls short of DVD’s

promise. It wouldn’t hurt to take

up a page or two with three ongo-

ing lists: (near) perfect transfers,

adequate transfers, and lousy

transfers, arranged alphabetically

by company.

If magazines like this have any

goal in life at least one has to be to

speak truth to power and put

more pressure on the industry to

do what’s right instead of extend-

ing its rip-offs further into every

new technology.

2.In keeping with that goal, editors

must not allow a DVD review to

get longer and longer because its

author is rehashing plot-lines or

attempting to create a “think”

piece about the film’s story con-

tent, idea content, the director’s

oeuvre – or lack thereof. I know,

everyone wants to strut his

insights. But there are other maga-

zines for doing that. Your bi-

monthly shouldn’t eat up precious

space that way. We’re after the

perfect movie vision, not the per-

fect movie insight. In the

July/August issue it took 14 pages

(about 14,000 words) to cover a

mere 18 DVDs because of such

noodling on. At that rate, you’ll

cover not much more than 100

DVDs per year. The list sure won’t

grow fast at that rate. More impor-

tant, the story content of most

DVDs isn’t strong enough to begin

to justify buying all the expensive

equipment that TPV reviews.

Everyone should re-read Morrell’s

thoughts about what constitutes

the viewing experience under var-

ious conditions.

3.If there’s anyone to supply them,

add more think pieces that illumi-

nate the problems and weakness-

es of the medium. Morrell’s “Theo-

ry of Relativity” is a good example.

My favorite would be a discussion

of whatever technical factors

cause some TV sets/monitors to

have that wonderful 3-D window-

on-reality look while others don’t

even come close.

I’ve seen cheap TVs in motels

have that “see through” look and

super-expensive units that did not –

at all. So it doesn’t take HDTV or

DVD to get there. But what causes it

and why don’t all sets have it? What-

ever the answer is goes to the heart

of attaining the perfect vision.

4.Please, don’t go back totally to the

“good old days” of TPV. Avoid

space eaters such as long, long

rambling interviews and general

articles about the history of film,

TV, Technicolor, formats, etc.,

unless the discussion is directly

and explicitly relevant to illumi-

nating specific problems with

attaining the perfect vision in cur-

rent media.

An example of relevance would

be the parts of Allen Daviau’s inter-

view where he reveals how sloven-

ly movie houses can be. Since the

goal is to “recreate” the theater

experience in the home, it’s rele-

vant to know what the theater

“standard” really is. For those inter-

ested in film as film, there are other

magazines. An example of irrele-

vance would be his own favorite

film scenes. How does that help

achieve the perfect vision?

5.As we go once more down the

primrose path toward another

technological bait and switch, TPV

can’t be too critical when any

manufacturer violates DVD’s im-

plied promise of perfect (or near

perfect) vision at low cost. That

would include manufacturers who

reportedly “cripple” the DVD play-

er’s video high-frequency output,

supposedly because viewers don’t

know enough to turn down their

set’s sharpness (edge) control.

Why not have three lists for front

end equipment, too?

After more than a decade of CD

hype, aren’t we all more than a lit-

tle disgusted when no reasonably

priced hardware can completely

reproduce the content of the best

software, forcing the consumer to

fulfill the promise by buying more

and more expensive equipment to

more “perfectly” decode the damn

thing? From a marketing perspec-

tive, it’s a perverse inversion of the

standard “give them the razor and

sell them the blades” tactic. Here,

even when the blades are great,

must all the reasonably priced

handles be so designed that you

can’t avoid cutting yourself?

6.Finally, a modest proposal for all

readers looking down that prim-

rose path. Given the increasingly

high cost of recreating a good

movie theater and the difficulty of

choosing compatible equipment,

and assuming your video purchas-

es have nothing to do with show-

ing a profit, wouldn’t it be wiser to

buy the small movie theater your

town isn’t using any more? Sever-

al audio/videophiles could even go

into this together.

The owners’ families would re-

serve the best seats. You could let

everyone else in for a buck and

pay the mortgage and film rental

costs with income from something

that has nothing to do with any

kind of vision but that is neverthe-

less endlessly popular – popcorn.

It’s just a thought.

Best wishes for great cash flow in

the future.

MIKE ROBBINS

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA

MROBBINS@POLESHIFT.ORG

HP: So your credentials consist solely

of “perfect honesty?” I might add that

you write well and make your points

cogently. And as you probably suspect -

ed when pen you first picked up, I am

far from being in agreement with the

bulk of your thinking, to the point of

saying perhaps the letter should have

best been addressed to some other mag -

azine (Widescreen Review perhaps?).

1.Agreed. I’ve been, since the re-

installation of a big home-theater

projection system, sorting the

DVDs in my collection into quite

distinct categories. You’ll be read -

ing about this in an upcoming

issue. My biggest problem to date?

Drawing the line between the A+,

A, and A- categories of excellence.

2.If there were other magazines

capable of strutting their “in-

sights” on film better than I can

muster as editor of this one, I will

cease. But I don’t believe that.

Content is at the heart of the mag -

azine. I quite agree that the

assessment of movies should

never be routine or mere assess -

ments of the plot line. That said,

I’ll note that the magazine is in

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Sony G90 manual Down Primrose Path Toward Perfect Vision Forever?, At all. So it doesn’t take Hdtv or