Sci-Fi Favorites With Bells On
War Of The Worlds and This Island Earth Never Had It So Good
Watched both these as fresh transfers, War on TCM, Earth a new-released Blu-Ray. Neither have looked better … ever. War of the Worlds is long venerated by my age group. Paramount had it back in theatres during the mid-sixties, leased to NBC for 2-21-67 broadcast, then did new ad accessories for a 1977 combo with When Worlds Collide aimed at theatres drunk on Star Wars and kin. Earlier upgrade for War of the Worlds exposed wires to hoist up Martian spacecraft, a trauma to some who didn’t like fx tricks laid bare. Latest tweak restores the illusion by erasing 53’s flaw, which wasn’t evident then due to IB Tech prints softer than dead-sharp imagery we are heir to. I can enjoy War, wires or no, being not a purist one way or the other. What pleases me is less movie magic than how Paramount creates a 50’s sound stage other-worldliness of theatre fronts (Samson and Delilah is playing, so why do townfolk bother about saucers landing nearby?), a campground with fire and tents where you can feel walls around Gene Barry and companions, then a square dance flavored by hot dogs and way of life that won’t be back. No wonder space invaders wanted us in 1953, life so serene as it appears to be here.
This Island Earth has a trick I never expected to see/hear on Blu-Ray, Perspecta sound, an ersatz stereo where voices could be heard from left or right according to player placement, a neat trick even if it won’t achieve high-fidelity as practiced by 20th Fox in their multi-track releases. Perspecta was used by Paramount, MGM, Universal, others, as cheap alternative to true stereo. Theatres got a decoder to play back Perspecta as recorded on otherwise ordinary soundtracks. The Liberty had Perspecta, probably before stereo (MGM was enhancing tracks to some of their cartoons in the early 50’s), but the control panel, which looked like an elaborate ham radio, was put to storage and left there even unto the mid-70’s when I came upon it and wondered what-heck “Perspecta” was. There was a collector I met in the mid-80’s who put me wise. Turns out it was a simple process … you could get gear from Radio Shack and build your own decoder, so he said, not reckoning with my utter lack of tech skill. What perked ears was Michael’s assurance that any 16mm print of a Perspecta release that had a variable density track would play back with separated sound, provided you had a decoder. So here I apparently was with 16mm tracks I could bounce all over the room, only rub being lack of a device to rightly do it. Being not science-geek enough to construct that, I let Perspecta remain the stuff of collecting dreams. Now that comes true thanks to effort of master minds Jack Theakston, Greg Kintz, and Bob Furmanek, their study, then application, of Perspecta enabling us to experience the process anew after sixty-five years. This Island Earth is available from Shout! Factory, War Of The Worlds had on Blu-Ray and even 4K.