Dvdbeaver — Goodfellas

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Subin Rajendran
Concept Artist
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“Focus groups?” Jimmy laughed without smiling. “Since when do we answer to focus groups? I’ll tell you what this is. This is a shakedown. You put out a garbage transfer now, then in two years you put out the ‘Director’s Preferred’ version with the grain re-added and charge sixty bucks. You’re robbing these people, Gary.”

Jimmy loaded the disc. His 65-inch OLED flickered to life. The Copa shot. The long tracking shot. But something was wrong. The faces were waxy. The shadows were crushed into black voids. And the grain? The beautiful, organic, 35-mm grain that Raymonds and Scorseses bled for? Gone. Erased. Smoothed over like a made guy’s silk suit after a hit.

As far back as I can remember, I always wanted to be a videophile.

Jimmy froze the frame on Joe Pesci’s face. It looked like a mannequin.

The Beaver nodded once. Then he paid for the drinks and left. Three months later, the Goodfellas Ultimate Collector’s Edition arrived. Jimmy reviewed it on DVDBeaver under the headline:

“We’re gonna have a sit-down with the Beaver.” The Beaver wasn’t an animal. It was a man. Gary “The Beaver” Beaverson ran a competing site, High-Def Digest , but he was also the inside man for three major studios. He approved the transfers. He signed off on the masters. He was the guy who said, “Looks good to me,” when the techs pushed the “smooth” button.

Frankie nodded. “Worse, Jimmy. They cropped the frame. The 1.85:1 is actually 1.78. They shaved off the sides. Two percent. Two percent of Scorsese’s vision. ”

That’s when Frankie “The Scanner” Carbone walked in. Frankie was Jimmy’s protégé, a kid who could spot a missing chroma channel from fifty paces.

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