Yes, I will be viewing both ESSENTIAL and DEFINITIVE as much as I can, renewing until I have to return them. What's great is that where I am located in New Jersey, I can order on-line from many libraries and pick up at my local library. I'll see how COME CLEAN looks on both. I always felt that this was an somewhat under-rated short going by the books I bought back in the 70s.
I have seen a bunch of L&Hs listed on my Amazon fire-stick, some I can view, some I can't, depending on what services my wife and kids subscribe to. In the past I have only spot checked them for giggles. I rarely watch the boys on anything but my film prints, as I have about 85 of them, including all the starring talkies produced by Roach.
Regarding my memory, I can say 3 things:
1. It is not what it used to be.
Sorry, I can't remember the other 2 things.
Regarding cue marks, if they are on the film element being scanned, leave them there. Don't digitally remove anything.
I'm not sure when the cues are put in -- I would guess on the dupe neg used to make release prints.
All this HD, 2k, 4k, 1080, 720, i or p, stuff confuses me. I'm a stickler for using units when a number is given, coming from an engineering college. I've looked it up many times, and 5 minutes later I forget the nuances. 1080 and 720 is either horizontal or vertical pixels, I never remember which. I think 2k and 4k is total pixels. The ESSENTIAL set says HD -- I wasn't aware that DVDs were considered HD.
One thing I know -- the total bit rate seems to matter more than anything. What good is 1080p with a low bit rate?
I still don't know or care about progressive or interlaced. Supposedly the latter is frowned upon. I know it has something to do with how each frame is displayed, or whether or not 2 frames are displayed concurrently -- or something like that. Sometimes ignorance IS bliss.
As long as it looks good. I've heard complaints that advertising the DEFINITIVE set as 4k was misleading, because even Blu-Ray is not 4k. In any case, they shouldn't have mixed and matched -- either all 2k or all 4k scans.
A few of my Blackhawk prints, like BUSY BODIES, have black frames.
I know Skredtvedt is an expert on the L&H films and the behind the scenes stuff, but I'm not sure how much he knows about handling film and doing scans. I know a bit about film elements, but there is still a lot I don't know. I know next to nothing on the intricacies of scanning a film and authoring DVDs, Blu-Rays, and other digital formats. In the past, I have simply used software to transfer videos I shot on digital tape to my PC. I also don't know what happens when I insert my key into my car to start it up. I just do it and drive. We can't be experts on everything.
Did Skredtvedt do any of the technical stuff on the DEFINITIVE set? I don't recall seeing his name on the technical credits.
Anyway, this is my limited understanding regarding film elements:
35mm: OCN->fine grain print (aka lavender)->dupe neg->release print
In theory, the OCN needs to be preserved as the highest priority, obviously, though since they were nitrate, many don't survive. I'm surprised that ANY OCNs of L&H films still exist!
Fine grains should be used to make more than one dupe neg, but should be used as little as possible.
Each dupe neg should be used to yield many prints until the dupe neg wears out, at which time a new dupe neg should be made.
Only go back to the OCN when there are no usable fine grains available.
The above pertains to film prints only -- since as we know the earliest generation film element is usually scanned for digital release.
It is my understanding that you can scan a negative and digitally turn it into a positive. I assume that's what they did for COME CLEAN.