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About MTI Film

Since 1997 MTI Film has provided award winning software applications to the post-production industry with a focus on technology for digital film restoration and digital dailies.   MTI now provides post production services for Television, Film and Commercial projects, as well as Film Restoration services. MTI Film products include Correct DRS™, Control Dailies, Control Dailies DA for Digital Acquisition Cameras, Control Color and the Convey Deliverables package.  

Wednesday
Oct292008

« Breathing New Life into "The Go-Between" »

Ascent Media, London, Employs MTI Film’s CORRECT to Restore a British Classic

London, UK - October 29, 2008 - Directed by Joseph Losey from a script by Harold Pinter, the 1970 film The Go-Between is classic of British cinema, telling a story of a torrid affair between an upper class British woman (Julie Christie) and a country man of humble origins (Alan Bates). For a new DVD release of the film, Dana O’Reilly, a restoration specialist at Ascent Media’s facility in London, spent more than 100 hours returning The Go-Between to its original cinematic splendor.

Working from HD 4:4:4 media scanned from the original camera negative, O’Reilly employed MTI Film’s CORRECT software in a three-step process. After identifying problem scenes, O’Reilly used CORRECT to automatically eliminate small dirt and dust particles. For more difficult problems, such as tears, chemical stains and bad splices, she used the software in its manual mode to apply specific repair options.

"I can split the frame into parts, move pixels around, adjust density, subtract grain, or replace part of one frame with part of another," she explains. "There are a lot of possibilities and you decide according to the nature of the problem."

Negative scratches are a common problem of older films. To address those, O’Reilly employed a feature of Correct to analyze the problem across a series of frames and apply an automatic solution. She then went back through each scene and applied additional repairs to frames that weren’t completely resolved. "It’s time-consuming," O’Reilly says, "but it’s also very satisfying to see the results."