BUT...those were directors that were using B&W film as artistic expression. Columbia used it because it was CHEAP! Sure, old film, pre-safety stock B&W is beautiful and luminescent. Two things the Stooges are not! I like the colorized DVDs just fine.
We really
do have the old gang back here, MJ... Anyway, maybe I wasn't clear enough about the qualities of black and white film. Sure, sometimes it was the low budgets that dictated to the directors of the time that they
had to use b&w, but look what they did with it! Some of the results are truly great, immortal even.
The "spooky" and "detective story" Stooges shorts, for example— especially the ones from the Shemp era, are very carefully planned out and stage-lighted for black and white film, every scene. Anyone who doesn't think so ought to check out "Dopey Dicks," to take one of the best examples of the Columbia lighting and stage set design. Laurel & Hardy, Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton, Fatty Arbuckle, Harry Langdon, and Charlie Chaplin just don't "look right" colorized, either.
Sometimes, being stuck with a low budget and primitive technology can make you
more creative, rather than less!
The new Tom Hanks film ("The Polar Express") is almost completely digital, including him. Will it be a great, memorable movie experience? We'll see.
Those old-timers could do one hell of a lot creatively and comedically with only human beings and a hand-cranked camera, or an early motorized camera and a carbon microphone, though... they were "A tough act to follow," you bet!