Showing posts with label Product Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Product Review. Show all posts

Sunday, May 10, 2015

A Good Retro Display - 19" Sylvania CRT

The System and its TV (no, there is not an ultra-rare Stadium Events in my NES)
Today, most people see CRTs are little more than space-hogging junk that they have to pay a fee to get taken away.  During a move, I happened to acquire a 19" TV and found it was excellent for classic video game consoles.  In this post I will give my opinion as to why it is so great.

The TV set in question is the Sylvania 19" SRT2119A Color Television.  This TV set is bare-bones and obviously intended for a bedroom, not a living room. The SRT2113A is its otherwise-identical 13" version.  It uses black matte plastic throughout, has six buttons on the front (power, 2x channel and volume, menu), a headphone jack and a mono speaker.  It also has a mono-composite AV input on the front and a coaxial RF screw for an antenna or a cable wire in the back.  The tube is curved but the viewable shape is fairly squarish.  If you look behind the back, you can see a fairly deep conical protrusion out the back that encloses the neck of the picture tube.  

The included remote is very basic, containing only 22 buttons.  One of those buttons is the aptly named TV/GAME button, which switches from the coaxial RF connection (TV) to the composite AV connection (GAME).  This remote is not really replaceable with a generic universal TV remote, I tried using my cable remote for all the Sylvania/Funai codes I could find and it did not work.  Unfortunately, the remote is the only way to operate the TV/GAME input switch.  Replacement remotes are available online, as is the Owner's Manual.  

The menus are easy to navigate.  When menu is pressed, the channel buttons select options and the volume buttons change the option.  The standard picture selection options are available, brightness, tint, contrast and color.  Sharpness is mysteriously absent.  The "GAME MODE" acts to remember a particular set of settings.  Many video games may benefit from boosting the brightness signal whereas TV or Cable programs and DVDs/VCRs may look washed out.  

The TV set also supports Spanish menu choices, V-chip, closed captioning and a sleep timer.  It will shut itself off if it detects no valid video signal (except when set to display the composite AV input) after 15 minutes and will also mute the numbered channels when they are displaying static.  It will tune itself to VHF channels 2-13 and UHF channels 14-69.  It is also "cable ready", so it will tune itself to the standard 125 cable channels.  Included in these cable channels is coverage in the frequency spectrum corresponding to Japanese channels 1 & 2, which RF only Japanese consoles use.  An original Famicom will be received on this TV, but you have to add the appropriate channels, 95 and 96 manually.  Channel 96 looks much sharper than 95, probably because of the foreign RF US signals (from the Famicom's perspective). Also, it is best to turn the TV off or the input to GAME when switching RF input channels.  Otherwise you may only see Black and White graphics and hear horrible and loud white noise.  

Opening the tube can be done very easily.  Remove the screws and then the chassis pulls right off.  The circuit board is very streamlined, so streamlined in fact that I could find no potentiometers to adjust.  Nor could I find adjustment potentiometers for the color guns on the tube's neck.  The only adjustments can be made to the flyback transformer, but there is no need to do that typically.  The main PCB can be pulled out from the tube housing for easy servicing. 

The speaker does its job adequately within its limits.  The headphone jack supports mono output only.  There is an audible and annoying buzz when this TV is turned on and nothing is coming from the speaker.  This may be due to the budget nature of this set or an aging filtering capacitor that should be replaced.   

If I may digress for a moment, back in the late 1980s, Nintendo partnered with Sharp to manufacture a TV set with a built-in Famicom and later a built-in NES.  This is the Sharp C1 TV, and it had a 19" viewable screen.  It was highly regarded for its picture quality because it used an internal composite connection.  This was unusual at the time, most NESes were hooked up using the included RF switchbox.  TVs with composite AV inputs were far from ubiquitous in the late 1980s and early 1990s.  Screenshots taken for magazines often would point their camera to one of these Sharp screens because of the improved picture quality (Sharp lived up to its name here), especially in Japan where the original standalone Famicom was RF only.  Essentially for the time the Sharp TV was as close to the canonical NES or Famicom display as you could get.  The Sylvania TV can produce a similarly bright and sharp picture though its composite connector. Newer CRT TVs like the Sylvania may be a better and certainly a cheaper option compared to the Sharp because CRTs tend to age poorly.

One of the Sharp's excellent but rarely mentioned qualities was its very squarish picture viewing area.  TVs have gradually evolved from spherical viewing areas to rectangular viewing areas.  The earliest TVs were like looking through a porthole, then a porthole with a straight top and bottom and then gradually sets gave more defined corners, flatter tubes and finally the perfect right angle corners of late model CRTs, computer monitors and LCDs.  Because the corners of the Sharp TV were relatively straight instead of curved as seen on many TV sets, you could see more video material in the corners.  Some games like Castlevania use those corners, which will be totally or partially masked off in TVs with more rounded features.  This Sylvania TV does almost as good a job as the Sharp TV in showing you the full NES image, the corners are just a bit more rounded.

Not all CRTs are best for classic gaming consoles.  I have read that some late CRTs with HD (1080i at best) support convert 240p material into 480i.  These widescreen HD CRTs may not work with light guns.  I have a Toshiba with a flat tube and it has some very odd distortion with classic consoles.  Often on the edges you can see the bleed from the border color, which should not be visible.  Due to the odd geometry (these tubes are not truly flat) the border often can be seen on the bottom portion of the screen, making the screen image look trapezoidal.  Perhaps because of the odd geometry or its 3 line digital comb filter, this Toshiba TV has trouble with games that rely on precise CRT timing.  Micro Machines is an excellent example of this issue, but many other Codemasters/Camerica games can exhibit bendy rasters..  Both in the menus and in game the raster will get bendy at places.  On the Sylvania TV, the raster is perfectly stable.  In addition, the baseball game on the Quatro Sports cart and the Linus Spacehead game on the Quatro Adventure cart show a vertical rolling screen on my Toshiba TV at times but a stable screen on my Sylvania.

The Sylvania display has its limits.  It only supports mono sound, so systems with stereo sound support, which includes all fourth generation and later consoles, will not show their true aural potential.  Consoles that can support more advanced video output modes, such as RGB, S-Video and Component Video, will not look their best.  Finally, 19" is not everyone's idea of an ideal size.  High end CRTs generally came in sizes up to 36" and sometimes even 40".  People with fond memories of large screen classic gaming will need to look for something larger.

In addition to the utter failure of the Zapper or R.O.B. or anything else that relies on the specific optical properties of a CRT screen working with an LCD screen, RF and composite video game signals look terrible on LCD screens.  Even a Framemeister cannot really do much here, the source of the signal is just too compromised.  The NES's signal is especially unsuited to the perfect digital flat-screens of today.  It's video signal is a bit gritty and what should be straight vertical lines come across as rather ragged with a three-line stairstep pattern. The lack of razor-sharp definition in a CRT can hide some of these flaws and turn others into an asset (dithering).

The final good thing about the Sylvania and TVs like it is that the can often be acquired for cheap to nothing.  People are only too happy to give these TVs away.  Thrift stores generally sell them for $5 or less.  You can find them if you are willing to dumpster dive or take TVs left on the side of the street.  I know of no other way you can get great image quality with full compatibility for classic video game systems so cheaply.

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Fun with the Framemeister

If you want to run your classic consoles on a modern flat screen HD TV, you probably will not like what you see if you connect the console's video output directly to the TV.  In fact, if you have a 4K TV like mine, you may not see anything at all!  Classic consoles were designed to display on CRTs, but if you do not have a CRT, you need this :


This is the Micomsoft XRGB-mini Framemeister.  As the photo indicates, it is an upscaler.  It is designed to upscale the video image of classic consoles from 240p and 480i/p to HD resolutions like 720p and 1080p.  It and the other products Micomsoft produces are unique because they are the only video scalers designed to work with classic video game consoles.  This comes at a steep price, the unit retails for just over $300 USD.  A friend lent me a unit to test, so here I will give my impressions of the unit.

The Framemeister outputs only via HDMI with a standard cable.  It has multiple inputs, composite video, S-video, analog RGB, D-Terminal (carries component video, adapters available to use RCA-style component cables) and two HDMI.  In addition to the buttons, it comes with a remote that makes selecting options from the on-screen menu much easier.  The Framemeister requires you to select the input you are going to use, and the remote has a button for each input.  If you do not select the correct signal, you will see nothing.  

Micomsoft a Japanese company, and while the company's page is not English-friendly, there is a large amount of information out there to help the new user out on various forums.  The firmware is upgradeable with a micro-SD card.  In addition, the micro-SD card can store the user's image settings, but the unit itself will remember stored settings.

With analog video, RGB (15.75kHz horizontal scan rate, 240p) the Framemeister provides the best possible output quality available today.  Alternatively, component video also provides nearly identical video output quality but also supports 480p whereas RGB is limited to 480i.  A third alternative is VGA, which is essentially 480p or better RGB (31.5kHz horizontal scan rate).  Below this tier is S-Video, then comes composite video and finally RF modulation.  

The RGB input uses a mini-DIN 9 connector, and Micomsoft provides a mini-DIN 9 to JP-21 adapter with the Framemeister unit.  Higher end European TVs had a SCART connector to accept an RGB signal and Japanese TVs used a physically identical but electrically incompatible JP-21 connector to do the same.  Micomsoft ships a Japanese JP-21 adapter, but there are European SCART adapters.  If you are using the Japanese SNES RGB cable, you need the JP-21 adapter, and if you use the European SNES RGB cable, you need a SCART adapter.  

The Framemeister can do a superb job upscaling RGB video to HDTVs.  It does not seem to matter if your RGB output is using composite sync or composite video for the sync signals, the device supports both.  In fact, you can approach the picture quality that you would get if you were displaying the output from an emulator on the screen.  The unit can output to standard HDMI resolutions like 720p, 1080i or 1080p.  I obviously recommend using a progressive resolution where possible.  It also supports DVI computer monitor resolutions if the display is DVI capable (and most are).  Here is the table in English of all the options available :

http://www.micomsoft.co.jp/XRGB-mini_Ver200_OSD_E.pdf

With S-Video, my SNES looked almost as good as the RGB output.  With composite video the image was nowhere near the quality of either.  Composite video is far, far more easier on the eyes on a CRT than any LCD, even as upscaled by the Framemeister.  I do not have a D-Terminal to Component adapter, but my HDTVs still support component input, so I cannot tell whether the Framemeister would be an improvement.  However, I doubt my TVs support 240p over component video, which is technically outside the standard.

Other than image quality, the other reason to consider a Framemeister is to decrease the lag involved in upscaling and processing the low-resolution console video to HD video.  At a 60Hz refresh rate, a console is generating frames every 16.66 milliseconds. It has been stated that the Framemeister adds 1 frame or 20 milliseconds of lag compared to the unprocessed output (i.e. being connected to a CRT).   TVs upscale and process all video to its native resolution before displaying it, so in this regard the Framemesiter is superior to just about any TV.  LCD TVs tend to have input processing delays of tens of milliseconds, and some sets can go over 100 milliseconds.  While one to three frames of lag may be imperceptible, how about five or ten?  By outputting to the panel's native resolution, one major source of lag is eliminated.   

I took some photos of the screen with my camera to give some idea of the differing picture quality between the inputs of the Framemeister and my TV's native input scaling.  My TV is an HDTV from 2008 that supports 1080p and has an S-Video and Composite input.  The SNES and the PC Engine Duo are the only RGB-capable consoles for which I have RGB cables.  The SNES almost always outputs 256 horizontal pixels.  The Turbo Duo usually outputs 256 horizontal pixels but many games use a 288, 320 or 336 horizontal pixel mode.  Here are the photos :

TurboGrafx-16 Bonk's Adventure - Composite Video Native TV Scaling
TurboGrafx-16 Bonk's Adventure - Composite Video Framemeister Scaling
TurboGrafx-16 Bonk's Adventure - RGB Video Framemeister Scaling
SNES Super Mario World - Composite Video Native TV Scaling
SNES Super Mario World - Composite Video Framemeister Scaling
SNES mini Super Mario World - RGB Video Framemeister Scaling
SNES Super Mario World - RGB Video Framemeister Scaling
SNES Super Mario World - S-Video Native TV Scaling
SNES Super Mario World - S-Video Framemeister Scaling
TurboGrafx-16 Ys Book I & II Composite Video Framemeister Scaling
TurboGrafx-16 Ys Book I & II RGB Video Framemeister Scaling
TurboGrafx-16 Ys Book I & II Composite Video Native TV Scaling
When it comes to SNES video quality there are generally the early consoles, which have one CPU and two PPU and APU chips, and the later consoles, which have a combined CPU and PPU chip and a single APU chip.  The latter are known as the 1-chip SNES, and were introduced in the last batches of the original SNES case.  When Nintendo released the SNES mini (a.k.a. SNESjr., SNS-101), this 1-chip design was always used. While the original case 1-chip SNESes still include RGB and S-Video output, the SNESjr. lacks the lines and circuitry for both.  The capability is still present in the video encoder, but requires an amplifier between the encoder and the Multi AV output pins.   Considering the tendencies of SNES consoles to exhibit the white line issue, using an amplifier is probably a good idea if you are going for the ultimate in image quality.  

The Framemeister is a jack-off-all-trades device.  For the NES, it is a great choice if you have a NESRGB mod.  The mod board costs about $70, more if you have a Top Loader or a Famicom.  Installing it is no small task because you have to desolder the PPU without destroying it or the pads and traces on the NES or Famicom PCB.  Of course, if you want to shell out the big $$$, you can get a Super 8-bit or someone to mod it for you.  However, for the most lag free and lossless video and audio, there is an HDMI kit that is nearly complete from Kevtris and GameTech.  This kit has lag that will be measured in scanlines, not frames.  HDMI kits may give the best video quality available, being tweaked to specific consoles, but a Framemeister will be cheaper than modding multiple consoles and supports just about any console or home computer that outputs a pure RGB analog signal.  It is probably the best overall choice if you don't have or want a CRT.

One important thing to note is that the HD resolutions of choice, 720p and 1080p, are not necessarily ideal for retro consoles if you want razor sharp pixels or to have all pixels the same size.  There are very few large 720p panels, and many of them may actually be 768 pixel panels that stretch everything.  Many of the best panels are plasmas, which you should not use with video games due to burn-in.  720 lines is an excellent resolution for NTSC retro consoles, all of which output 240 lines, even if some of those lines only show a border color.  1080 is not an ideal resolution.  Some pixels will take up more lines than others.  The best solution is to output a 960 line image and put up with borders.  Many TVs will simply stretch everything.  The Framemeister does not seem to allow for total user control over the horizontal and vertical scaling.  

Thursday, March 6, 2014

IBM PCjr. Upgrades

IBM PCjr. Internal Modem

The IBM PCjr. Internal Modem fits in a special slot inside the PCjr.  The Modem sits at COM1 and this is undoubtedly its most useful purpose in the modern era.  The BIOS designates the internal serial port, with no modem installed, as COM1.  The resources the serial port uses, I/O 278H and IRQ3, are those typically assigned to COM2.  This causes programs no end of confusion, and usually a program like COMSWAP is used to redesignate the serial port as COM2.

The Internal Modem uses the resources typically assigned to COM1, I/O 3F8H and IRQ4.  By installing one, even if you never intend to use it, the BIOS will assign the Modem to COM1 and the serial port to COM2.

If you want to use a serial mouse and you don't have the Internal Modem installed, you can use the Cutemouse v1.91 driver.  You will need to use the following command line argument /S13.  This tells the driver to use the device at COM1 and IRQ3.

IBM's PCjr. Internal Modem is based on the Novation 103 Smart Modem, which uses a command set somewhat different from the Hayes compatible command set most terminal emulator programs expect.  However, once you learn the basic commands and how to implement them in a terminal emulator, it can be used, as it was intended, at 300 baud.  It does not have any speaker on it, so the only way to know whether you have connected is to review the messages sent from the modem.  All commands can be shortened to the first letter, like the Hayes command set in many instances.

To initialize the modem, use the command : I

To set the format, use the command : F.  The modem supports the following serial data formats (data bits:parity:stop bit) :

0 - 7:M-1
1 - 7-S-1
2 - 7-O-1
3 - 7-E-1
4 - 8-N-1

The default is 7-E-1.  M is Mark Parity, S is Space Parity, E is even Parity and O is Odd Parity.  To set the format to 8-N-1, use the command : F 4.  The initialize and format commands can be carried on the same command line, separated by a comma.  Using an 8-bit speed will show more corrupt characters than using the 7-bit speed, but it is faster and more compatible with BBS terminals that still allow for dialup.

The command to dial is appropriately called "dial", and you type in the number after it.  I would recommend putting a "w" just before the number to ensure the modem dials using tone rather than the old-fashioned pulse and add a short delay to avoid any confusion by noise at the line gets taken off the hook.  This is a command to dial : D w15555555555.

The command to answer is : A.  The hangup command is : H.

Any commands to the modem must be prefaced by a control character.  The default character is 0E/Ctrl N. This is the equivalent of the AT control character of the Hayes commands. The command string must be terminated by a carriage return/Ctrl M, just like Hayes.  However, there is no +++ equivalent, the modem will always view one of the 255 ASCII codes as a command code, but it does allow you to change the default ASCII value with the N command.

The program ProComm, 2.4.3, which was very popular back in the day, will work with the PCjr. Internal Modem.  The default strings to enter in the setup menu look like these :

^N I, F 4 ^M
^N D w##########
^M
^N H ^M

If you have a phone service that uses a stuttering dial tone to indicate that you have new voicemail, this modem may interpret the stuttering signal as a BUSY signal and do nothing.  Clear your voicemail.

Many of the few BBSes expect a faster transmission rate than 300 baud or a more robust modem solution. One BBS that more or less works is the Capitol City Online BBS out of Frankfort, KY.  Its telephone number is 502-875-8938.

IBM PCjr. Parallel Printer Attachment

This sidecar adds one parallel port and was a very popular add-on for the PCjr, which did not come with a parallel port.  The parallel port is a standard DB-25F connector, unlike virtually every port on the back of the PCjr.  It uses  the standard CGA LPT1 resources, I/O 378H and IRQ7.  If there is no parallel printer sidecar installed, then the serial port will receive the LPT1 designation.  When the parallel port is installed, the BIOS will reassign LPT1 to it.  IBM did not allow the settings on the parallel port adapter to be changed, so only one parallel port is supported.  There is a fairly simple mod to change the I/O to the LPT2 278H address, you can find it here : http://www.brutman.com/PCjr/lpt2_mod.html

The parallel port is a unidirectional port by default, capable of nibble transfers.  There is an easy mod to make the parallel port bidirectional.  This will double throughput when an external devices wants to send data through the parallel port to the computer.  The instructions for the mod can be found here : http://www.brutman.com/PCjr/parallel_port.html  This mod will also work with the ISA-based IBM PC Printer Adapter and the IBM Monochrome Display and Printer Adapter and probably all clones that implement a parallel port strictly using TTL logic.

The parallel port is useful for more than just connecting to printers, although it can do that too.  I have connected it to a 2008 vintage Brother MFC-8860DN and it was able to print from DOS.  It is far more useful to use with a 100MB zip drive or an Ethernet adapter like the Xircom PE3-10BC.  The Xircom's packet driver (PE3PD.COM) and test program (PE3TEST.EXE) work just fine with an 8088 machine and a PCjr.  The packet driver is initialized as follows for a PCjr. with an unmodified parallel port :

pe3pd sint=60 non

The non tells the adapter to operate in the non-Bidirectional mode (a.k.a. Unidirectional), and sint=60 assigns the Packet Driver services to software interrupt 60H.  The driver can autodetect the presence of the adapter on any of the LPT assignments and the Interrupt.

Using the Xircom adapter, you can transfer files to and from the PCjr. with relative ease.  There is a suite of TCP/IP utilities called mTCP, which you can get from here. http://www.brutman.com/mTCP/  The DHCP client utility especially useful for automatically obtaining all the critical information (IP, Gateway, Nameserver) from your route to connect to the Internet.  I typically start up the packet driver and dhcp client in a batch file which I created (MTCP.BAT) and it looks like this :

c:\mtcp\pe3pd sint=60 non
set MTCPCFG=c:\mtcp\tcp.cfg
c:\mtcp\dhcp.exe

There are other useful utilities.  The IRCJR functions as a basic Internet Relay Chat client.  You can use it to chat on IRC.  It will not download files from IRC though.  I use it to connect to the Vintage Computer IRC channel on irc.slashnet.org, /join #vc.  SNTP will obtain the time and date from an internet server and set the time and date in DOS.  This is very useful for systems without a Real Time Clock or you want more exact time.  There is also a Telnet client with ANSI emulation for all your text-based terminal needs.  There is also a basic FTP client.  It can copy (get) multiple files, but not sub-directories.

To actually use these utilities, you need to create a file called TCP.CFG.  At a minimum, the following is required :

PACKETINT 0x60
HOSTNAME PCjr

The PACKETINT must correspond with the Packet Driver's software interrupt, but the HOSTNAME can be anything.  DHCP will add or change the necessary configuration every time you start the DHCP server.  Individual mTCP utilities will have their own settings in this file.

The most important utility is the FTP Server.  This utility lets you operate your PCjr. as an FTP Server.  The practical application of this utility is an easy and modern method to send from and receive files to your PCjr.'s (or any DOS machine) drives.  You setup the FTP Server on the PCjr,'s end and use a modern FTP Client on your modern PC like Filezilla.  This is what I use, and with a few tweaks to Filezilla, it works well.

In Filezilla, set the transfer type to binary, the maximum number of connections to 1, the timeout to 200 seconds and the speed limits to 25K/25K.  If you have a bidirectional port, you can push the speeds higher, but 50KB/50KB is the max you will probably be able to get from a PCjr.  A V20 or faster CPU will speed up transfer rates a bit.  Filezilla expects to talk to a modern machine, and it runs so fast that the flow control will get screwed up waiting for the slow PCjr.

On the PCjr. FTP Server, I recommend the following lines added to TCP.CFG :

FTPSRV_PASSWORD_FILE ftppass.txt
FTPSRV_LOG_FILE log.txt
FTPSRV_EXCLUDE_DRIVES AB
FTPSRV_FILEBUFFER_SIZE 16
FTPSRV_TCPBUFFER_SIZE 16
FTPSRV_PACKETS_PER_POLL 10

The first two are required for FTP Server to run.  The remainder give the maximum buffer sizes and exclude the floppy drives.

jrIDE

jrIDE is an amazing sidecar that was recently (2012) developed by PCjr. enthusiasts, mainly Alan Hightower.  It combines 1MB of SRAM, a real time clock chip and can boot 16-bit IDE drives.  It can support an IDE master and an IDE slave drive, and it can effectively support hard drives up to 8GB (the maximum of using DOS and FAT16).

The RTC is a Dallas 12887 module, and is socketed for replacement.  The date and time is set by a program called rtc, loaded in the autoexec.bat file on startup.  IRQ 1, 2 or 7 can be selected for its operation.  I suggest IRQ2 because the parallel port uses IRQ7 and the keyboard on a regular PC uses IRQ1, which could possibly confuse some programs that are not PCjr-aware.  The Speech Attachment also uses IRQ1.  Using an IRQ really is not essential for this function.

In order to set the date and time, you will need a small program called rtc.com, available here:
http://www.retrotronics.org/svn/jride/trunk/prebuilt/jr/

To set the date and time for the RTC, first, set the correct date and time in DOS using the DATE and TIME commands.  Next, run the rtc.com program with the /r switch.  This will send the date and time you told DOS to the RTC.  Finally, add the rtc.com program to your autoexec.bat file with the /d switch.  Upon every bootup, this will fetch the correct date and time from the RTC and automatically set it in DOS.

The IDE header is at a right angle and has all 40 pins. Pins 1 and 2 are at the bottom of the board.  The key pin can (via jumper) be used to provide +5v to power low-power devices like Disk On Module (DOM) devices or Compact Flash cards.  The PCjr., without a power sidecar, is not likely able to supply sufficient power for a 2.5" or 3.5" hard disk drive.  I found that even a DOM had difficulty when it was the third card in the system.

The jrIDE BIOS is based on the Universal XT-IDE BIOS, so it should be able to support drives up to 8.4GB in size supported by Int 13 and maybe higher if true LBA is used..  Practically speaking, the use of DOS (pre 7.1) is going to limit you to 4GB drives.  You will need PC-DOS or MS-DOS 4.0 or better to use a primary partition (primary drive) greater than 32MB and logical drives greater than 32MB.  With DOS 4.0 or above, you can have a primary partition of 2GB (C:) and one or more logical drives in the extended partition within the remaining 2GB (D:).  With DOS 3.3, below, you will be limited at a maximum to a primary 32MB partition (C:) and 32MB logical drives in the extended partition, D:-Z: for 736MB total hard disk space.  With PC-DOS 3.0-3.2, only one DOS 32MB partition is available for a C: drive per disk.  DOS 2.1 allows only one 15MB partition for C:.  Using DOS 5.0 or above requires patching the DOS system files as outlined here : http://www.brutman.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=224&p=1978&hilit=stacks#p1978

Of that 1MB of RAM, you can have 736KB total conventional memory, even though the PCjr. only counts to 640KB on the startup screen.  However, without a device driver loaded in config.sys, DOS will only see 128KB of RAM, and that is before it loads itself and the video buffer is taken into account.  The remaining RAM is the slow RAM controlled by the video controller.

The device driver to use with the PCjr. and jrIDE is JRCONFIG.SYS v3.10 from PC Enterprises.  The most basic use of it is to load it in config.sys like so :

DEVICE=C:\JRCONFIG.SYS -V64

When this driver is loaded with a jrIDE, it will give you 608KB of conventional memory free.  Physically, this memory is between the first, slow 128KB and the video buffer window which starts at 736KB.  The lower 128KB is reserved for DOS and the video memory.  You can use what is left over for a RAM disk.  RAM disks are especially important if you are using a null-modem to transfer data to or from a PCjr. because the machine lacks DMA.

A system booted to DOS with JRCONFIG v3.10 and no other drivers or an autoexec.bat loaded will report 753,664 total bytes (736KB) and 610,656 bytes free (596KB).  You can also try an earlier version of the driver called JRCONFIG.DSK v2.14, which should require less RAM.

The driver has many command line switches, the only one that most people will need is -v64.  This will allocate 64KB of video memory within a 32KB video page so that programs using the 320x200x16 and 640x200x4 modes will work.

The only major downside to using JRCONFIG is that it is not really compatible with Cartridge BASIC.  REM out the line with JRCONFIG or simply rename config.sys when you need to use Cartridge BASIC and DOS.  Cartridge BASIC is limited to 64KB free memory and freaks out if it is told there is more than 128KB in the system.

Since JRCONFIG uses software interrupt 60, which is the default software interrupt for many Ethernet DOS packet drivers, assign the packet driver to use a different interrupt.

You can find JRCONFIG here : http://www.brutman.com/PCjr/pcjr_downloads.html  jrconfig.zip is the v2.14 version, jrcfg310.zip is the v3.10 version.

To obtain a jrIDE, join the PCjr. Web Forum, here : http://www.brutman.com/forums/  Be prepared to spend well over $100 to obtain an assembled one, and you may have to wait.  The board assembly itself requires only through hole soldering, but the project is still quite the undertaking.

NEC V20

Most IBM PCjr. will have a socketed 8088 CPU, located underneath the disk drive.  If you are unlucky and received one of the last units sold by IBM, the CPU will be soldered onto the motherboard.  You can remove the 8088 CPU from the socket and replace it with a V20 CPU for a decent (10-15%) speed boost while retaining nearly 100% compatibility with software.  The most common part number for the V20 is the NEC D70108.  If you have a soldered CPU, you can always remove the CPU and solder in a 40-pin socket.

The V20, V30, 80186 and 80286 and later CPUs are not 100% compatible with 8086/8088 software because the 8086/8088 have undefined/illegal (as opposed to undocumented) opcodes whereas the later CPUs do not.  The only game I am aware of, after a great deal of searching, that may not support the V20 PCjr. is Lode Runner, but every version of the game available for download works just fine with a V20.  Every cartridge game for the PCjr. works fine with the V20.

Increasing the clock speed of the 8088 or V20 is not for the faint of heart.  There is one 14.318MHz crystal on the PCjr that is used for all system timing.  This includes the CPU clock speed, the 8253 Timer input and the OSC signal.  In the PC it is arguably more difficult to overclock because the DMA chip uses the CPU CLK signal for its timing.  Replace that crystal and all three frequencies, which are derived from an Intel 8284 Clock Generator chip, will change.

There is a PCB design called PC-SPRINT that essentially directs a higher clock solely to the CPU.  It is a separate board which is piggybacked on the existing CPU socket.  It has a separate crystal and a second 8284.  Typically, speeds of 7.16MHz or 7.37MHz are stable, although some people have boasted of obtaining a 9.54MHz speed.

IBM PCjr. Speech Attachment

This sidecar contains a TMS5220 chip very similar to the chips used in the Speak & Spell toys of the time and sounds identical.  It uses two methods to digitize and playback sound, LPC (linear predictive coding) and CVSD (continuously variable slope delta modulation).  The TMS chip handles the LPC while the CVSD is handled by a MC3418.  Interfacing to these chips is through an 8255 PPI and 8254 Timer.  All audio output is routed through the system board multiplexer just like the 3-voice chip.

LPC allows for the use of compressed digitized samples and the sampling rate is of higher quality.  The Sppech Attachment uses this method to play its built in vocabulary of 196 words, phrases and sound effects. Its 32K ROM chip resides at CE000-CFFFF.  The voice playback of the vocabulary samples has an 8KHz sample rate.  The built-in vocabulary is very easy to access in BASIC.  You can add your own (compressed) vocabulary words with a computer that has a program that can encode the recorded sound into the format of the Speech Attachment.

CVSD allows for recording voice and sound through the microphone input and play it back.  Normally voice recording is limited to disk size, but if you have a large hard disk, this will be less of a concern.  The recording and playback speed through the microphone ranges from 1.8K-4.8K per second.  CVSD encodes at 1 bit per sample, so that audio sampled at 38.4 kHz is encoded at 38.4 kbit/s.  The default addresses used are FB98-FB9F, FF98 and FF9F.  It also uses IRQ1.

The best program I have discovered to use the Speech Attachment is MAKETALK from PC Enterprises.  It will allow you to play the vocabulary and build sentences for recording by an external device and also allow you to record and playback to the limits of your disk space.

IBM PC Compact Printer

IBM released this low-cost printer to go with its low cost entry system.  It is a thermal printer and uses an 8-pin head.  It has just one button for line feed and a power switch and LED.  The printer uses the PCjr. serial BERG connector that plugs directly into the PCjr, but adapters exist that can convert it into a DB-25 connector for use with a regular serial port and a PC compatible.

This printer can print 56 characters per second, but only prints from left to right.  It can print 80 characters per line in standard mode, and supports double width mode, compressed mode, compressed/double width mode and underlining.  It prints all the 256 IBM ASCII and Extended ASCII characters except for the 64 block characters at 176-223.  It also supports a 480-bit graphics mode.

The Compact Printer uses an 8.5" wide paper roll.  The rolls typically are not perforated, so the user must cut or tear pages to length.  The lack of perforations makes it ideal for banners and graphics.  Staples and OfficeDepot sell 8.5" rolls, typically 98' or 164'.  Thermal printers do not need ink ribbons, ink or toner cartridges, so their operational cost is strictly from the paper.

The printer has a data transfer rate of 1200bps and uses 1 start bit, 8 data bits, no parity and 2 stop bits.  In order to obtain reliable operation, as in no missing or skipped characters, you should use the following parameters with the MODE command :

mode COM2: 1200, n, 8, 2, p

Without the IBM Parallel Printer Attachment, the BIOS assigns the serial port to LPT1.  Thus devices printing only to LPT1 should not have a problem.  If you have a Parallel Port attached, then it will be assigned to LPT1.  You can redirect LPT1 to COM1 or COM2, depending on which your printer is designated, by the command :

mode LPT1:=COM1: or

mode LPT1:=COM2:

The last issue with this printer is loading the paper.  First, you lift the smoky colored cover.  Next, there is a tab on the left side that you push in, allowing the paper roll enough room to fit inside the housing.  Fit the cardboard portion of the roll onto the two pegs.  The end of the paper must be feeding upwards and counterclockwise.  Release the latch on the side to let the printer allow the paper to be fed to the thermal head.  Take the edge of the paper, fold it in a U shape, and guide it down behind the beige plastic bar.  Use the paper feed button until the paper catches.  Gently adjust the paper, once you can see it through the underside of the thermal element so that it is straight and then close the latch on the side to hold the paper in place.  Make sure you have enough paper so that a little bit of paper appears over the plastic cover when you put it down.

Tandy Mod

One upgrade you may want to make to your system board is to make it more compatible with games that support the 160x200x16, 320x200x16 or 640x200x4 graphics modes only with a Tandy 1000.  Some games (essentially just about every PC game released after 1985) will allow you to select Tandy graphics, but when you play these games on a stock PCjr., you will only see every other line.  The Tandy mod will fix this problem.  A good guide to the mod with instructions can be found here : http://vintagemashups.net/2011/12/ibm-pcjr-tandy-1000-graphics-mod/

Other problems may prevent a game from working on a PCjr., including when a game auto-detects a Tandy 1000, keyboard or joystick input issues, graphical anomalies due to the differences between the Tandy and PCjr. graphics controllers, disk-based copy protection failures.  You may need to set the audio multiplexer to output 3-voice music before starting a game.

Of PCjr. games, the only game I know of that doesn't like the Tandy mod is ScubaVenture, which will throw a line out of place about every time the screen scrolls.  The line is solid, which makes it more difficult or impossible for the player to pass it without losing a life.  Mouser also shows some graphical garbage on the top of the screen with the Tandy mod, but it does not interfere with game play.

Memory Sidecars

If you are not fortunate enough to obtain a jrIDE, you can add memory expansions that were sold for the PCjr. if you can find one.  These typically come with 128KB or more of RAM, and without any modifications you can add up to 512KB of RAM in this way to the system.  IBM's Memory Expansion is configured through four dipswitches on the back of the sidecar.  Only one switch should be "ON" for each Expansion, the rest must be OFF.  You could attach up to four expansions, and the first expansion should have switch 1 ON, the second expansion switch 2 ON, the third expansion switch 3 ON and the fourth expansion switch 4 ON.

The IBM Memory Expansion can be modded to have 512KB on a single sidecar.  You must remove the sixteen 64Kx1 DRAM chips and replace them with 256Kx1 DRAM chips.  Just to the right of the large 74S409 chip, you will see three solder pads closely aligned in a row, with a trace connecting the left and center pads.  You must cut that trace and connect the center and right pads.  It may be possible to mod this card to 736KB, but I do not know how.

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Versions and Sources of the Phantom of the Opera

I.  What was Actually Released? - Theatrical Release Versions

A.  The Los Angeles Preview Version

As its name implies, this was a rough cut of Phantom of the Opera shown to test audiences in Los Angeles on January 7 and 26, 1925.  At this point, the direction was totally credited to Rupert Julian.  The critical and audience response was largely negative, and led to substantial changes.  The ending is the closest to the book, as the Phantom is shown to die of a broken heart after he learns that Christine can never truly love him.  An alternate ending where the Persian shoots the Phantom in his lair was shot and may also have been shown in some screenings of this version.  Only this version also includes a scene at the Graveyard and Madame Valerius, both of which were in the novel by Gaston Leroux.  Also like in the novel, Christine tells Raoul of her unmasking of the Phantom in flashback as they talk on the Opera Roof.  At this point, Arthur Edmund Carewe's character is The Persian, just like in Leroux' book, and the Phantom's backstory is consistent with the one given in the book.  This version was long enough at 22 reels to have an Intermission.

B.  The San Francisco World Premiere Version

This was the second version of Phantom of the Opera shown to the public, in this case at the Curran Theater in San Francisco for a four week engagement from April 26 into May 23, 1925.  This version includes newly-shot scenes directed by Edward Sedgewick.  It too suffered a critical drubbing and audience apathy, and again the film was sent back for further editing.  This version includes a newly-shot substantial subplot with Raoul and a Count Ruboff, played by Ward Crane, competing for Christine's affections, leading up to a duel. Added for mostly comic relief were Chester Conklin as Raoul's valet and Viola Vale as Christine's maid. The subplot occurs outside and separate from the happenings at the Opera and has been criticized as being cliched.  The film's ending where the Phantom tries to escape the mob by carriage and is beaten and thrown into the Seine was shot by Sedgewick and first appears in this version.  This and all subsequent versions could come in at 10 reels.

C.  The New York General Release Version (General Release)

The third time was the charm for the Phantom, this version premiered at the Astor Theater in New York City on September 6, 1925 and shown well into 1926 across the United States.  All of the material directed by Sedgewick for the San Francisco version was eliminated except for the new ending.  At this stage, The Persian has become Inspector Ledoux of the Secret Police and the Phantom is a madman escaped from Devil's Island.  Also, this version has the famously inept shot of Norman Kerry playing with his gloves as the he is eavesdropping on Phantom talking to Christine behind the wall.  To the extent that any of the versions from 1925 have survived, this is the version that still exists in some substantial form (see part II-B, below).  This version was reported to contain sequences of the Opera stage and stairwell, including the Bal Masque, in Prizma color and Process 2 Technicolor.  It also uses the Handschliegl process for at least the Phantom's cape when he spies on Raoul and Christine on the roof of the opera.

D.  The Talkie Re-release Version (Talkie Re-release)

Four years after the last footage had been shot for the silent versions of the Phantom of the Opera, Universal decided to make reissue it as a partial talkie.  To do this, they reengaged Mary Philbin and Norman Kerry and some of the other original actors alongside some new actors to shoot new sound sequences that would be edited with the silent footage. Carlotta was now played by Mary Fabian, who could sing, and her mother was played by Fay Holderness for the talking scenes with the managers.  Edward Martindel replaced John Sainpolis as Phillipe de Chagny except in a few long shots, and  These sequences were directed in 1929 by Ernst Laemmle.  Lon Chaney was under contract to MGM and Universal could not dub his voice.  To get around this problem, they had another actor act as the Phantom's servant for those scenes where the Phantom talks to other people behind a wall or mirror.  Once the Phantom as portrayed by Lon Chaney appears in person to Christine, intertitles resume and his servant disappears.  The servant was played by Phillips Smalley.  This was first released in Dallas and Detroit on January 3, 1930, but is mostly lost (see II-E, below, regarding its survival).  It came in 10 reels.

II.  What Survives? - Film and Disk

A.  The George Eastman House Print (Eastman Print)

The best visual representation of the film in terms of quality survives in a 35mm print struck by Universal at the request of James Card, first curator of the George Eastman House in 1950.  This print runs to ten reels and is about 90 minutes at 20fps and 75 minutes when run at 24fps (sound speed).  It is not tinted and has no technicolor sequences.  It also is apparently cropped on the left side, probably because it was duplicated on machinery intended for sound film.  A sound negative in the Academy Ratio has the optical soundtrack running down the left side of the film.  Although the original aspect ratio of the film is 1.33:1, due to the blocking on the left side of the image, the resulting Eastman Print has more of a Movietone aspect ratio close to 1.2:1.  With sound film, the width of the film stip is the same but the left side of the film strip is taken up by the optical soundtrack.  It has some moderate to severe mottling damage during the scene where Christine wakes up in her "bedroom" in the Phantom's lair.

This Print has been erroneously believed to be the Talkie Re-release, but it is not the case.  Virtually all the footage in this print was shot in 1924-1925.  The opening titles for the Eastman Print are from the Talkie Re-release in 1929.  The "Phantom" skulking through the set during the titles is not Lon Chaney.  The surviving sound discs for the Talkie Re-release do not synchronize with this footage except during Carlotta's signing from Faust.

The Eastman Print contains a puzzling sequence at the beginning of the film where a man with a lantern is walking in the cellars of the opera and "talks" to the audience.  The Phantom's shadow in cape and hat also appears in this scene.  The scene lasts for approximately one minute at sound speed are there are no intertitles.  This caused film historian Scott MacQueen to believe that this sequence was shot so Universal could release the film internationally as a sound film.  The Man with a Lantern could be attached to any foreign print speaking in the local language, and combined with the singing sequences, a foreign distributor could technically release it as a talking film.  What he is saying has never been definitively established, but Phillip Riley in the Phantom of the Opera, Magic Image Filmbooks Series, Classic Silents - Volume 1, showed the sequence to a deaf person and a lip reader and one of them opined that the Man with a Lantern was speaking in German.  The other person thought he could make out "Gaston Leroux".  The other alternatives, albeit without any documentary support, is that this was a U.S. silent version of the Talkie Re-release for theaters that had not converted to sound or it was an internal reference print for Universal itself.  No advertisements indicate that the Phantom was being offered for rental as a silent film in 1929-1930.

The actress who played Carlotta in 1925, Virginia Pearson, was redesignated as Carlotta's Mother in the Eastman Print. Carlotta was played by Mary Fabian, using footage shot for the Talkie Re-release.  The opening credits give listings for both actresses, but the closing credits are from the General Release of 1925 and only list Virginia Pearson as Carlotta. The shots where Christine sings on the Opera Stage just before she is abducted by the Phantom is also from the Talkie Re-release.  The notes and intertitles were also from the Talkie Re-release, although some new ones were necessary for the scenes which had talk but were silent in this print.

B.  The John Hampton Show-at-Home Duplications Compilation Print (Hampton Print)

The Eastman Print is a mix of mostly outtakes and second camera takes shot in 1924-1925, B&W alternate takes of color footage and some Talkie Re-release footage.  The only other near complete source for the Phantom of the Opera came from the collection of John Hampton, an early silent film preservationist who ran the Old Time Movie theater from 1940 to 1979.  He showed only silent films at this theater which is still in operation and now known under new management as The Silent Theatre (and plays sound films as well, but all its silent films are played at sound speed). Back in the 1930s, Universal marketed 16mm reduction prints of some of their silent movies to the mass market.  This is how 1923 film of The Hunchback of Notre Dame starring Lon Chaney survived.  Hampton was able to collect some of these Show-at-Home prints to compile a mostly complete representation of the 1925 General Release of the film.  According to one source, Hampton took the best elements of eight separate prints and spliced the best parts of each to make the print that is available today.  Hampton's materials found their way to the Stanton Theater Foundation and are now stored at the UCLA Film and Television Archive.

This version is not at the same level of quality as the Eastman print.  Detail is softer, contrast is poorer and scratches abound.  It is much longer at about 115 minutes when run at 20 frames per second.  No tinting or color sequences are present on the film elements.  When compared, The Hunchback of Notre Dame has a better quality picture than Phantom as represented in the Hampton Print because it survives as a true Show-at-Home print and is fewer generations away from the negative.  The releases of the Hampton Print currently available use scans of dupes from Hampton's prints.  Hampton's original materials, which are stored at the UCLA Film and Television Archive, are superior to what is available but they have not been made generally available.  UCLA announced a restoration of Hampton's original materials about fifteen years ago, but no progress has been made.

While the Hampton Print is almost totally comprised of footage from the 1925 General Release, the title sequence is borrowed from the Talkie Re-release until the card "Produced in its entirety at Universal City, California."  The Bal Masque footage seen in the print is from the B&W camera, not the Technicolor camera which the 1925 General Release Version used (see below).

There is short sequence with the man with the lantern at the beginning of the Hampton Print, but it only lasts for about 13 seconds in this Print and included a medium shot of him not in the Eastman Print.

C.  Trailers for the 1925 and 1929 Releases

The trailers for both the 1925 General Release and 1929 Talkie Re-release versions survive.  The trailer for the Talkie Re-release is believed to contain much of the original title sequence for the 1925 film.  If there was a sound disk (see section I-E., below) for this trailer then the disk has not survived. Ironically, the trailer for the 1925 General Release on most discs uses the title sequence from the 1929 Talkie Re-release.  The surviving trailer film for the 1925 General Release should probably have begun with the Phantom shown over the Opera house with the names of the principal stars. Also, all the footage shown in the Talkie Re-release trailer was shot in 1924-25, no actual footage shot in 1929 was used.

The trailers contain some footage not seen in the Eastman or Hampton prints.  For example, the trailers show the Phantom riding up the counterweight of the pulley mechanism that controls the mirror, which gives a more convincing explanation why Christine does not see him at first.  It is easy to see why this was cut, however.  With that shot, the impact of seeing the Phantom as masked is diminished.

D.  Technicolor Bal Masque Sequence

In the 1970s, Film Archivist David Shepard, working for Blackhawk Films, discovered a sequence in two-strip Technicolor of the opening scenes at the Bal Masque.  This film runs from the intertitle introducing the Bal Masque to the point when Christine and Raoul go onto the roof.  The sequence was shot with Technicolor equipment and is different visually from the same sequence in the Eastman Print, shot using the B&W cameras.  Two subsequent sequences, the first being Christine and Raoul descending from the roof and Florine encountering the Red Death have not been located but do exist in the Eastman Print in B&W.

The Eastman Print uses 1929 Talkie Re-release style intertitles and B&W footage.  The Hampton Print also uses the B&W footage, but the intertitles have a curtain-style background.  The Technicolor footage uses a third set of intertitles, in color with a different typeface from the first two and a different curtain image.  Essentially there are three surviving versions of this sequence : Eastman B&W, Hampton Technicolor-to-B&W & Shepard Technicolor.

E.  Talkie Re-Release

The 1929 Talkie Re-Release does not survive in its entirety.  It had a Vitaphone soundtrack where the sound was stored on vinyl records or discs synchronized to the film projector.  The 1929 Talkie Re-Release came on 10 reels and the ten accompanying sound disks survive.  Of the film itself, only Reel 5 has been found and is currently stored in the Library of Congress, as are the sound disks.  The reel is missing some footage, but Christine and Raoul have aged, especially the former.  The Phantom's servant is visible in the newly-discovered Reel 5.  Overall, there is about 1 minute and 15 seconds of new footage showing Christine and the Phantom's servant shot in 1929 and about 12 seconds of Raoul in footage shot in 1929 from this reel.

Here are the scenes with no corresponding video on the discs :

Scene 1 - Manager's Office: the Managers and the House Manager discuss why Box 12 has not been rented recently

Scene 2 - Outside and Inside Box 12: the Managers interrogate Madame Giry and investigate the occupant of Box 12

Scene 3 - Manager's Office: the Managers discuss the Phantom's demand to have Christine sign in Faust

Scene 4 - Christine's Dressing Room: Raoul asks Christine about her new-found fortune and her new admirer

Scene 5 - Opera Stage & Box: Christine sings in Faust and Phillipe warns Raoul about the Phantom

Scene 6 - Christine's Dressing Room: Raoul asks Christine again about her admirer and her Master's servant tells Christine that she should be prepared to go soon

Scene 7 - Manager's Office: Carlotta's Mother tells the Managers that her daughter will sign in Faust.

Scene 8 - Christine's Dressing Room: The Master's servant tells Christine to come through the mirror.  The film for this scene has been mostly recovered.

Scene 9 - Roof of the Opera: Christine tells Raoul that she has seen the Phantom and they make plans

F.  "Scream Scenes"

This is a compilation of clips from various films which was released in 1959.  It shows a cut-down version of Christine's encounter with the Phantom in his lair and the unmasking scene.  It's importance lies in that it contains three title cards, none of which exist in the Eastman or Hampton prints using the same text, suggesting that these scenes were taken from the Los Angeles or San Francisco versions of the film.  It also contains a shot, not found on any other version, of the Phantom warming up on the organ before Christine exits the boudoir.  The shots in the boudouir do not suffer from any nitrate decomposition as they do on the Eastman print.  The Phantom sequence of "Scream Scenes lasts approximately 4:42.

III.  What's Available - Home Video Releases

As the Phantom of the Opera is in the public domain in its raw format, anyone can scan the film and release it on some kind of home video format.  There have been cheap VHS and DVD copies found in bargain bins for years.  The cheapest releases are usually from an ancient transfer of the Eastman Print, sometimes a 16mm reduction print or derived from the Hampton Print.

All quality releases (with one exception) since the first Laserdisc in 1990 have two pedigrees.  The first is from David Shepard, Blackhawk Films and Film Associates.  The second is from Kevin Brownlow and Photoplay Productions.  Shepard took the Eastman Print and inserted the recovered Technicolor Bal Masque sequence for the B&W footage in the Eastman Print.  The work dates from 1990 but has been tinkered with since then.

Brownlow's version dates from 1996 and in addition to substituting the Technicolor footage, makes other changes.  First, the Man with a Lantern and the closing cast credits are excised completely from this version. The justification for the first edit was likely that the sequence was superfluous to a silent film and would be puzzling for a modern audience.  The second edit was done because the credits mistakenly credit Virginia Pearson as Carlotta when she was re-cast as Carlotta's mother.  This version was broadcast to great fanfare on Channel 4 in the U.K. that same year and the general public would not be familiar with the issues surrounding this footage.  Second, the Handschiegl effect on the Phantom's cape has been simulated using computer colorization. Third, the Bal Masque sequences after Christine and Raoul have descended from the roof have been computer colorized to approximate the two-color Technicolor look, even though the Technicolor film would have used different shots.  Fourth, for the nitrate-decomposition affected scenes set in Christine's intended bedroom in the Phantom's lair, footage from the 16mm Hampton Print was  substituted as it does not demonstrate the heavy mottling captured in the Eastman Print.

Shepard's version would eventually follow Brownlow's in part on the Blu-ray by recreating the Handschiegl effect on the Phantom's cape and in the Torture Chamber.  The tinting schemes used by both versions have substantial differences, as described below.  In their presentations of the Eastman Print, both versions leave out the B&W variation of the Technicolor Bal Masque Sequence.

The main score for the Shepard editions is from French-Canadian composer Gabriel Thibaudeau and composed in 1992, while British composer Carl Davis performed the honors for the Brownlow version in 1996.  If one of these composers is identified in the version you are watching, you know from which pedigree your version comes from.

Shepard's version has been officially released on five occasions on an optical disc format, on Laserdisc in 1990, on Laserdisc and DVD in 1997 and on Blu-ray in 2011, all by Image Entertainment, and in 2015 by Kino International.  Brownlow's version has been released twice, first by Milestone Film (distributed by Image) in 2003 and by the BFI in 2013.  The 1997 DVD and BFI discs are region free, the 2003 DVD is Region 1 and the 2011 and 2015 Blu-rays are Region A.  The  latest Blu-rays are all still in print or easily available.  All releases are single disc unless otherwise stated.

A.  Discs Released

1.  1990 Image Laserdisc

This version runs the Eastman Print at 24fps with the Gaylord Carter Organ Score (probably the same recording as on the Image Blu-ray), but also includes the Hampton Print as an extra without a score. It contains the 1925 Trailer.  This disc has long since been superseded.

2.  1997 Image Laserdisc and DVD

This version runs the Eastman Print at 20fps with the Thibeadeau score but only includes some scenes from the Hampton Print not included in the Eastman Print.  It also includes the 1925 Trailer and an essay.  This may have been the first silent film to be released on DVD.

3.  2003 Milestone DVD

This two-disc version runs the Eastman and Hampton Prints at 20fps.  The Hampton Print is accompanied by a score from Jon C. Mirsalis.  It contains the 1925 and 1929 Trailers, the latter with sound from the Talkie re-release discs, a video interview with Carla Laemmle and an audio archival interview with cameraman Charles Van Enger, still reconstructions of the Los Angeles Preview and San Francisco World Premiere versions, an extract of Faust from the 1929 feature Tiffany, nine dialogue selections from the Talkie re-release discs, the soundtrack from the talkie re-release edited to the Eastman Print, audio commentary by Scott MacQueen.  The only major film sequence missing and available at the time of this release was the Man with a Lantern from the Eastman Print.  The Eastman Print exhibited here has a problem with ghosting and motion artifacts believed to be the result of an improper PAL to NTSC transfer.  While this DVD is long out of print, it contains many extras not found elsewhere.

4.  2009 Reelclassics DVD

This four disc set offers the Eastman Print with the Technicolor Bal Masque sequence and the Eastman Print with the B&W Bal Masque sequence.  The score included for the Eastman Print is an organ score from Lee Erwin and a voice for the Man with a Lantern by John Griggs.  It also offers the Hampton Print with the Technicolor Bal Masque sequence and a score by Ben Model.  The print scanned for the Eastman Print is 16mm reduction from Griggs Moviedrome.  Its features include a "widescreen" side by side comparison of the Eastman and Hampton Prints and the Technicolor and B&W Bal Masque sequences.  Finally, it is the only release that features the "Scream Scenes" footage.  These discs are printed on burned DVDs.

The contents of the DVDs are as follows :

Disc 1 - Eastman Print (from Griggs Moviedrome) with Technicolor Bal Masque sequence, The Light of Faith (short film starring Lon Chaney from 1922), Scream Scenes

Disc 2 - Eastman Print (from Griggs Moviedrome) with B&W Bal Masque sequence, 1925 Trailer

Disc 3 - Hampton Print

Disc 4 - Eastman vs. Hampton Print side-by-side Comparison, Bal Masque Color vs. B&W Comparison with commentary from, Keith Paynter

5.  2011 Image Blu-ray

This Blu-ray disc contains two HD versions of the Eastman Print.  One version runs the film at a progressive 24fps at 1080p and shows noticeably less print damage.  The other version runs the film at 20fps.  Since Blu-ray spec only officially supports progressive frame rates at 24p or 23.976p, the 20fps version uses a 1080/29.97i resolution and telecine pulldown to support the unusual frame rate.  A score from the Alloy Orchestra or the Gaylord Carter Organ score can be selected for the 24p version.  The Carter score was composed in the 1970s and is synchronized to the film running at 24fps.

The 20fps version on the 2011 Image Blu-ray was interlaced using a pulldown process.  The actual frame rate is 30fps, and this is achieved through interlacing.  The field rate is here becomes 60fps.  So, in between each two pure frames of the video, there is a "dirty frame" consisting of the odd lines of one frame of the film and the even lines of the next frame of the film.  You can see this illustrated here :

Field NumberFrame Displayed
11o
21e
32o
42e
53o
62e
73o
83e
94o
104e
115o
124e
135o
145e
156o
166e
177o
186e
197o
207e
218o
228e
239o
248e
259o
269e
2710o
2810e
2911o
3010e
3111o
3211e
3312o
3412e
3513o
3612e
3713o
3813e
3914o
4014e
4115o
4214e
4315o
4415e
4516o
4616e
4717o
4816e
4917o
5017e
5118o
5218e
5319o
5418e
5519o
5619e
5720o
5820e
5921o
6020e

o stands for odd, e stands for even and the highlighted pair are the dirty frames.

The Thibaudeau score or an audio commentary from Jon C. Mirsalis can be selected for the 20fps version. This Blu-ray contains a tinted version of the Hampton Print, but it is presented in Standard Definition NTSC resolution (720x480) only.  It is accompanied by a piano score from Frederick Hodges.   The 1925 Trailer is included and an interview with composer Thibeadeau, both also in SD.  The Fifth Revised Shooting Script and Souvenir Program are also included as a succession of still images.  The contents of this disc were released by Park Circus in the U.K. on a Region B disc.

The first pressing of this disc had a non-intuitive menu where you could only select the versions of the prints you wanted to watch by selecting the score attached to that version.  To change to another version you had to eject and reinsert the disc or jump ahead to the end.  Also, all stereo scores were output in mono and the Carter score was out of sync for Reel 1.  The ballet dancers in the first ballet sequence also appear to be moving in slow motion in both the 24 and 20fps versions.  A replacement disc fixes the stereo/mono issue and uses a new, more intuitive and technically impressive menu.

6.  2013 BFI Blu-ray Dual-Format

This package contains one Blu-ray disc and two DVDs.  Although this post and blog is written from the perspective of someone in the United States, I am not adverse to including information about a new and substantial release elsewhere in the world.  The Blu-ray disc and the two DVDs included are region free, but the DVDs are PAL and may not play in a U.S. player.  The Blu-ray and the first DVD have identical content, with the Eastman and Hampton Prints and the extras, the second DVD just has the documentary Lon Chaney : A Thousand Faces.

Both the Eastman and Hampton Prints are run at 20fps, but in both cases the 1080p/24fps mode is used on Blu-ray.  This is a dual-format release, so the prints are presented on the Blu-ray and one of the DVDs.  On the DVDs, all video is shown at the 50i PAL standard.  The film is sped up 4% as a result, but the audio is pitch corrected.  This means that one out of every five frames is repeated to make up the missing 4fps.  The Hampton Print is in HD, unlike the Image Blu-ray, but is not tinted.  The Technicolor Bal Masque sequence in the Eastman Print is windowboxed, as is the sequence where they used a 16mm print for the scene with Christine in the boudoir, presumably to match the Movietone-like aspect ratio of the rest of the Eastman Print.  The shots of the Phantom on the roof with the Handscliegl effect applied are cropped and somewhat grainier than the rest of the film.

The BFI Eastman Print is based on the 1996 Brownlow restoration.  This restoration was done at standard definition at the PAL format.  For those sequences where the 16mm Hampton Print is used to replace the damaged scene with Christine in her bedroom in the Phantom's lair, the three color titles at the Bal Masque, the Handscliegl process on the Phantom's cape and the colorized portion of the Bal Masque, all these sequences have been upconverted from SD materials.

The two trailers are included, and the recently discovered material from Reel 5 of the 1929 Talkie Re-release is included synchronized with its sound disc.  The Man with a Lantern from the Eastman Print is included as an extra, the sequence remains excised from the main presentation.  All video footage on the Blu-ray is presented in HD, scanned at 2K.  The DVD uses the same scans, downscaled from HD into SD PAL.  The short sequence of the Man with a Lantern from the Hampton print is deleted in this version.  Also, the closing credits card in the Eastman Print for the cast is deleted.

The second DVD contains the documentary Lon Chaney: A Thousand Faces, first broadcast for Turner Classic Movies in 2000.  It is directed by Kevin Brownlow and narrated by Kenneth Branagh.  A booklet accompanies the discs describing the production and restoration of the film.

7.  2015 Kino-Lorber Blu-ray or DVD

This Blu-ray is something like a re-issue of the now out of print Image Blu-ray, but comes on two Blu-rays.  A DVD version is also available.  The first Blu-ray has 24fps and 20fps versions of the Eastman Print like the Image Blu-ray, but nothing else.  The 20fps version is now using the 24p progressive frame rate supported by the Blu-ray format.  The 20fps version also appears to have been noticeably cleaned up compared to the Image Blu-ray and even the 24fps version has minor improvements and corrects tinting errors.  Because these versions share a dual-layered disc, their bitrates are higher than the older Image versions.

The 2015 20fps version is displayed progressively at 24p (or 23.976p).  In order to do this, every fifth frame is repeated once to make up the extra 4 frames needed by the format.  The reason this is done for this and many other silent films is because the Blu-ray format does not officially recognize any other progressive frame rate except for 59.94p at 1280x720.

The 24fps version on the Image and Kino Blu-rays came from Paul Killiam's film collection.  Killiam was a comedian in vogue in the 1950s who did much to help preserve silent film.  His print was duplicated directly from the Eastman Print and I believe eventually found its way into David Sherpard's Blackhawk Film archive.

The 20fps version on the Kino Blu-ray is a slowed down version of Killiam's print.  The old 20fps version on the Image Blu-ray was duplicated from Killiam's copy, making it as a source a generation further away from the Eastman Print.  This is one reason why it looks rather rough.  Neither version on the Kino disc shows the tint colors in the pillarboxes on the sides of the video, which was a flaw on the Image Blu-ray.

There was a sychronization issue with the Thibedeau score on the Image Blu-ray which was mostly fixed on the Kino Blu-ray.  The only issue that was not fixed was the slow motion ballerinas.  The ballerina sequence at the beginning of the film was stretch printed on the print Image and Kino used. Stretch printing slow downs the action shown on film by duplicating frames when prints are made.  Fortunately this issue lasts only for a minute or two (3:04 to 4:42 on the Kino 20fps version for example) and does not affect any other portion of the film.  I think the ballet music used in this scene goes on for too long and spills into the next scene.  The Alloy Orchestra's score on the 24fps version is much better timed to the action.

Unfortunately, the Carter score on the 24fps version is totally out of sync for the first 11 minutes of the film.  The correct music plays about a minute and a forty-five seconds later than it should.  The music for the ballerinas start to play at the end of the next scene with the managers.  This sync issue may have occurred on the first version of the Image Blu-ray but did not on the second.

All the extras and the Hampton print are on the second Blu-ray disc, which is also dual layered.  The extras are mostly the same as on the Image Blu-ray with three extras.

The Hampton Print is now in 1080i, but it is an upscaled version of the 480i version found on the Image Blu-ray.  However, it is better to have the upscaling done by professional software instead of the Blu-ray player or the TV, and the film uses much more of the disc on the Kino than the Image.

Essentially, if the old Image disc is version 1.0, the newer image disc is version 2.0, then the Kino disc is essentially version 3.0.

B.  Video Quality

1.  Eastman Prints

All discs except for the 1990 Laserdisc have a speed-corrected transfer of the film to 20 frames per second. except where specified as running at 24 frames per second.  Sound films use 24 frames per seconds, but silent films generally were projected at 16-22 frames per second.   Milestone's Eastman Print has a serious issue with ghosting and jittery movement, probably due to frame rate differences between the PAL video master and its conversion to NTSC video.  Image's Blu-ray versions suffer from some unnatural slowdown during the opening ballet sequences and speedup in the first scene in the manager's office, but are otherwise without motion issues (unless they are in the original print).

As befitting Blu-ray, the Eastman Print on either disc looks much sharper than any DVD or Laserdisc due to the high definition transfer.  One example of this is that it is easy to identify in which shots (except for long shots) Chaney is wearing his mask with painted on eyes and which shots he is using a different mask with cutouts for his eyes. However, sometimes the focus is soft, so you should not expect razor sharp clarity in every frame.

As has been noted by others, the Image 24fps version had some amount of post-processing work done to reduce the scratches and wear on the print.  However, no attempt was made on either Image version to remove large hairs that pop in the edges of the frame, large scratches or a broken film perforation fragment which appears as Christine meets the Phantom for the first time.  People have stated that the Image 20fps version, while looking more worn, also looks more natural and less processed.  Milestone and BFI seem to have made attempts to clean up their video presentation of the major blemishes and scratches.  There is no broken film perforations in these versions.

Milestone and BFI substituted 16mm footage from the Hampton print for most of the scene where Christine is in her room in the Phantom's lair.  This was due to the nitrate decomposition damage already present on the Eastman Print.  Image DVD and Blu-ray used the 35mm footage instead.  The 35mm footage here is not as sharp or clear due to the mottling, but still sharper and has better continuity with the 35mm footage preceding and following it.

Image Laserdisc, DVD and Blu-ray have the Man with a Lantern sequence, Milestone does not and BFI has it as an untinted extra.  When Photoplay Productions created the video broadcast master used by Channel Four, Photoplay or Channel Four must have deleted it as it would be baffling to the uninformed viewer.

Image also has the cast credits at the end of its Eastman Print, Milestone and BFI do not.

Image Laserdisc, DVD and Blu-ray have no Technicolor footage after the scene on the roof of the opera. The footage is tinted.  Milestone and BFI has colorized all the footage of the Bal Masque occuring after the scene. Image Blu-ray recreated the Handschiegl process for the face of the Rat catcher and to visualize the heat in the torture chamber.  While I was previously aware of the possibility of some Handschiegl work for the rat catcher's scarf, I was not aware that there was the possibility of the Handschiegl process being used for his face or the torture chamber.  Both recreate the process for the Phantom's costume when he is on the roof, but the result is noticeably different.

Milestone's left border is fuzzy, but Image's is sharper.  Image's may have a sliver less of information in the video frame as a result.  The BFI has a sharp border and a sliver more information than Image.  The Technicolor footage of the Bal Masque came from a different source and will be in a true 1.33:1 ratio.

While the tinting is the same color on the Image 24fps and 20fps there are fluctions in the saturation levels between the two prints in some scenes.  The scene where we first encounter Florine Papillon, Snitz Edwards' character, is very orange in the 24fps and much more sepia in the 20fps.  The BFI Blu-ray tints are often extremely saturated, especially the blue for night scenes and the purple for opera cellar scenes.

There is a frame rate issue inherent in the Eastman Print.  The vast majority of the footage was shot in 1925 at silent speed.  This should be projected correctly at 20fps.  The footage shot in 1929 would have been shot in sound speed.  This means that the Opening Titles (where the phantom is skulking in the frame), The Man with a Lantern scene and the shots of Mary Fabian as Carlotta singing should be ideally projected at 24fps (especially for the latter if it is to be synchronized to the existing audio.  The shots where Christine is singing just before she is abducted by the Phantom may also be from 1929.  The BFI handles this by running these sequences at a true 24 frames per second while running the rest of the film at 20 frames per second.

2.     Hampton Prints

Milestone is a straight black and white presentation of a show-at-home print.  Previously this version existed on the 1990 Laserdisc and really poor public domain releases.  I would advise lowering the contrast a bit when watching it.  There are combing artifacts due to the interlacing.

Image apparently added tints to their presentation.  Universal would not have gone to the extra expense of tinting 16mm inexpensive show at home prints.  Both Milestone and Image are in standard definition.

Despite what the back of the Image Blu-ray case says, they used a 16mm source for the 1925 version.  (I am not even sure if motion picture film exists in a "6mm" gauge.)  In my opinion, Milestone boasts a slightly sharper image due to the lack of tinting (see below for more detail).

BFI's Hampton Print is in high definition, and the image quality is far superior to either Milestone or Image.  It also shows more of the film frame than Milestone.  Even the BFI's DVD has superior image quality to anything released before this.  Unfortunately, the Man with a Lantern is excised from this version and two of the title credits "freeze" the image weirdly for several seconds, probably to keep the score in sync (the Man with a Lantern sequence takes a few seconds).  This also happens on two intertitles during the scenes where Christine is meeting the Phantom for the first time.  This was probably done to ease the transition between print changes.  (Several prints were used to make up the Hampton version).

D.  Audio Options

1.     Milestone Eastman Print

a.     Carl Davis Score

This is an orchestral score performed with the City of Prague Philharmonic in 1996.  Davis has had a long history composing scores for films both silent and sound and for television.  Score is in stereo.  

b.     1929 "Synchronized" Soundtrack

In this version, the producers have tried to match the sound disks for the Talkie Re-release as best they could to the action on-screen.  There is music playing throughout the film as composed or compiled in 1929 and there is voice acting roughly at places where it should be.  The intertitles are still shown of course.  While PowerDVD reports this track as being in stereo, the soundtrack is obviously monaural.

One issue to note is that the film which this track accompanies is being projected at 20fps, but the dialogue and music for the talking version was recorded at 24fps.  This means that the music and dialogue is being played back at a 20% slower speed than it should be playing.  It sounds a bit creakier than it should.  

c.     Scott MacQueen Commentary

MacQueen's commentary shows that he is an authority on the film.  Its very entertaining to listen to and possesses a nearly encyclopedic knowledge of the film's production.  He tells the story of Phantom from its beginnings in Gaston Leroux's novel through the 1925 and 1929 versions, interrupting to comment when something is on the screen.  He was primarily responsible for the 1929 soundtrack.  

2.     Milestone Hampton Print

a.     Jon C. Mirsalis Score

This is the same individual who did the commentary on the Image.  His website is http://www.lonchaney.org/.  My favorite score for the 1925 version of the film and is tied with the Carter/Killiam score for my all-time favorite score for Phantom.

3.     Image Eastman Print/24fps

Unfortunately, Image's scores can be heard only with their respective versions.  The scores offered for the 24fps version cannot be heard with the 20fps version and vice versa.  This is due to the fact that these scores and commentary were intended for a particular running time.  The 24fps version runs 77 minutes long, the 20fps version 91 minutes.  The 1925 version of the film runs for 124 minutes.

a.     Alloy Orchestra Score

The Alloy Orchestra is a trio of artists who specialize in composing scores for silent films.  They are based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.  I have listened to some of it, and its a bit too modern for my taste in silent music scores.  Their website is http://www.alloyorchestra.com/.  They use synthesizer keyboards, musical saw, clarinet, accordion, banjo and what they call "junk percussion".  Score is in stereo.  

b.     Gaylord Carter Organ Score

Composed and performed by Gaylord Carter in 1974 and copyrighted in 1989 by Kino.  Carter's career began in the early 1920s, accompanying silent pictures with his theater organ.  He was able to find work with sound films, radio and television and performed into the 1990s.  In the 70s he scored many silent pictures released by Paul Killiam's Film Classics.  Score is in stereo.

The credits for Image indicate that Carter was actually playing at the organ.  The version I grew up with from Killiam's Film Classics gave credit to Richard Simonton for Theater Organ.  This version was copyrighted in 1971,  Was Simonton the organist or the provider of the organ?  Image uses a different recording that Carter made for Blackhawk Films instead of the one he made for Killiam.

I was bitterly disappointed when the instrumentation I heard on Image was different than on Killiam's release.  I believe Killiam's is vastly superior, uses the organ in a much more "fuller" way and is my personal favorite of all the musical accompaniments for Phantom.  The score, except for the first little bit, can be found here : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wp4e8cWp1xQ&list=PLY2WnIaqPW97t53BbiUZe8uPOecqkkPKa

The first bit with the Film Classics opening can be found here : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_xaXGS8j00&list=UUd7WChc4LjvA-QLBkKEWQSA&index=11&feature=plcp

4.     Image/Kino Eastman Print/20fps

a.     Gabriel Thibaudeau Orchestral Score

This score was composed in 1992 with the I Musici de Montreal and included vocals from a female soprano.  Personally I am not a fan of it.  This is the score also found on the 1997 Image DVD.  Score is in stereo. 

b.     Jon C. Mirsalis Commentary

Mirsalis is an unapologetic admirer of Lon Chaney.  The longer his commentary goes on, the more it focuses on Chaney's life and career and less on the film.  It is a nice complement to MacQueen's commentary.  He almost certainly makes an error when he states that the General Release version premiered in San Francisco in September, 1925.  It premiered in New York City.  He also makes some unwarranted speculation that the Bal Masque sequence may have been shot in Prizmacolor.  There is no substantial doubt that it was shot in two-strip Technicolor.  

5.     Image/Kino Hampton Print

a.     Frederick Hodges Piano Score

This score was commissioned specifically for Image.  Score is in stereo.

6.     BFI Hampton Print

a.     Ed Bussey Piano Score

This score was commissioned specifically for BFI.  Score is in stereo.  Neither the Image or BFI piano scores for the Hampton Print come close to Mirsalis' score, in my opinion, on the Milestone disc.

E.     Extras (Not including Audio Options)

1.     Milestone Eastman Print (Disc 1)

a.     1925 Theatrical Trailer

Untinted, silent, has few extra seconds compared with Image.

b.     1929 Theatrical Trailer

Has synchronized soundtrack, tinted in sepia.

c.     Still Gallery

Los Angeles Premier Version photo Reconstruction, San Francisco Premier Version photo Reconstruction, Posters & Lobby Cards, Promotion, Press Kit, The Phantom Stage, Publicity Portraits, Backstage Stills, Concept Art, Publishing

d.     Talking Extracts from 1929 Sound Version

Consists of nine sequences, most of which were not included in the synchronized sountrack option.  Sequences are Managers' Office I, Box 12, Managers' Office II, Garden Love Scene, Faust - Trio and Finale, Christine's Dressing Room, Managers' Office III, Through the Mirror, Apollo's Lyre.  The length of many of these scenes is longer than their equivalent silent counterparts and are noticeably different.  Here is an example :

In the Box 12 excerpt, the managers speak to the maid, enter the box to find the Phantom, exit and talk to the maid again, enter to put the Phantom out, but when they find the box empty, they exit and tell the maid to tell no one.  This takes approximately 2 minutes to accomplish at sound speed.  In the silent version, the managers only speak to the maid once and are able to finish the scene in 1 minute, 40 seconds at silent speed.

e.     Scene Selections - 24

2.     Milestone Hampton Print (Disc 2)

a.     Video interview of Carla Laemmle by David J. Skal

Carla Laemmle was the niece of Carl Laemmle Sr., the President of Universal Studios.  Laemmle put his relatives on the payroll, and Carla played the part of head ballerina in Phantom.  She also plays a passenger in the coach in the opening scene of Universal's 1931 production of Dracula.  Her interviewer is David J. Skal, a noted researcher into Universal's horror films of the 30s and 40s.  He has written several books on the subject of horror films.

b.    Faust opera extract from film Midstream

Contemporary footage of a the 1929 film Midstream which features Charles Gounod's opera Faust, which is so prominently featured in Phantom.  It gives you an idea what 1929's sound technology could do when am opera scene needed to be filmed.

c.     Audio interview with Charles Van Enger, ASC

This interview was recorded on July 29, 1973.  Enger was the principal cameraman on Phantom and the interviewer was Richard Koszarski.  He had a low opinion of Director Rupert Julian and respected Lon Chaney.

d.    Scene Selections - 29

3.     Image Blu-ray

a.     Interview with Composer Gabriel Thibeadeau

This interview was done for a PBS station and reveals that Thibeadeau enjoys accompanying screenings of silent music with a piano.

b.     Still Gallery

Unlike Milestone, the stills on this disc are not given a submenu where they are broken down by categories.  Some stills are very sharp, others look like they were scanned from a book.

c.     1925 Theatrical Trailer

Tinted in blue and purple, uses Hodges piano score for music.  Missing ending shot of crowd outside Astor Theater.

d.     Script

This is the Fifth Revised Shooting Script by Elliot Clawson and Raymond L. Shrock.  Each page is shown for 3-4 seconds.  The script can also be found in Philip J. Riley's book Phantom of the Opera : Hollywood Archives Series Vol. 1.  It is still in print and can be found here : http://www.amazon.com/Phantom-Opera-Hollywood-Archives-Series/dp/1882127331/ref=sr_1_cc_1?s=aps&ie=UTF8&qid=1347579685&sr=1-1-catcorr&keywords=phantom+of+the+opera+riley

e.     Theatrical Souvenir Program Reproduction

Presented identically to the script.  A Blu-ray's zoom function is useful here.

f.     Scene Selections - 12 per version

4.     BFI Blu-ray/DVD Combo

a.     1925 General Release Trailer

No tint, uses 1929 Title Card (with the title merging to the center).  Uses 20 frames per second within 24p on Blu-ray.  Interestingly, you can see in this extra what the title card looked like without the cropping of the Eastman Print.

b.     1929 Talkie Re-release Trailer

Sepia tinted, uses 24 true frames per second speed.  The music comes from the Talkie Re-release discs, but is different than the same trailer on the Milestone.

c.      Reel 5 of the 1929 Talkie Re-release

No tint for the footage that comes from the true Reel 5, Sepia tinted for scenes taken from the Eastman Print to complete the reel.  There are two places where the frame goes black for a second or two, one of these is where Christine speaks the line "Oh my, I'm afraid."  The Phantom's servant can be seen clearly speaking the line "Come through the mirror, have no fear."  24 true frames per second on Blu-ray.

d.     Man with a Lantern Sequence

No tint, 24 true frames per second on Blu-ray.

e.     Channel 4 Silents restoration programme

This is included as a PDF file on the first DVD.  This programme was issued to theatre patrons when the 1996 Brownlow restoration premiered theatrically in London in 1926.  It gives the history of the production, the restoration, biographical summaries of Chaney, Julian, Philbin, Kerry and discusses the Davis score.

f.     Lon Chaney - A Thousand Faces Documentary

On the second DVD, first broadcast by Turner Classic Movies in 2000, an 86-minute documentary on the life and films of the great actor. PAL Format.  As this documentary was produced by Kevin Brownlow in the U.K., the 25fps PAL format is not an inappropriate video standard.

g.    Booklet

This booklet contains articles from Kevin Brownlow, Patrick Stanbury and Geoff Brown describing their experiences with the Phantom.  There is also a description of the features of the discs and production credits for the film and the Chaney documentary.  Finally, there is technical details about the transfer.

E.     Kino Blu-ray

a.     Interview with Composer Gabriel Thibeadeau

See description for the Image disc above, upscaled to HD.

b.     1925 Theatrical Trailer

See description for the Image disc above, upscaled to HD.

c.     Script

This is the fifth revised shooting script, although this version is presented as scrolling text set to the Thibeadeau score.  

d.     Travelogues

Two travelogues by Burton Holmes depicting Paris in 1925, Paris from a Motor and A Trip on the Seine.  I am not sure how relevant this is supposed to be for a movie set closer to 1885 than 1925, but movie cameras were still being invented in 1885!

e.     Talkie Excerpts with Reel 5

This contains a shortened version of the film in HD running 53 minutes and using a fair amount of the existing audio from the 1929 Talkie Disks.  This is superimposed over the Eastman Print footage and the recently found Reel 5 of the 1929 Talkie version.  When there is dialogue with no corresponding film, there will be a black screen with explanatory text.  This is similar to how it was presented on the Milestone DVD, but the Milestone DVD provided the whole film with the soundtrack, it was not truncated as it is on the Kino Blu-ray.  The Milestone DVD has all the talking scenes from the 1929 Talkie Disks available to be heard individually, the Kino Blu-ray does not present all the audio or the talking scenes.

F.     Defects in and Changes from the First Pressing of the Image Blu-ray

When the Image Blu-ray disc was first released, it was discovered that the disc was defective.  First, all stereo scores ended up in monaural.  There was no recall of the discs, so owners of the first release had to have contacted Image to secure a replacement disc.  Image has since merged with Acorn Media and replacement discs are no longer available.  The Gaylord Carter score was out-of-sync for the first couple of minutes.  Finally, the old menu required you to select the version of the film by selecting the score.  So to watch the 20fps version, you had to select the Thibeadeau score.  You would have to know which score went to each version.  Moreover, to change to a different version you had to either eject and reinsert the Blu-ray or chapter select and fast forward to the end of the version.  The new menu lets you choose the version first, then the score.  If you return to the main menu, you can choose another version.  Here are a screenshot of the old and new menus :

Old Menu - You could have obtained an replacement disc if this is what you see
New Menu - Much better organized
G.    Tinting Differences

The Shepard and Brownlow restorations and the Hampton Print on the Image Blu-ray have different tinting in several sequences.  Brownlow barely uses tint in the Phantom's lair on the Milestone and these scenes are completely black and white on the BFI.  Shepard uses sepia tinting for these scenes, and I could find no purple tinting at all.  Brownlow uses purple for the opera cellars.  Image has no tinting for the first intertitle "Sanctuary of the song lovers..." or for the intertitle and the short scene where Raoul reads Christine's note just prior to the Bal Masque.  This confirms that the original 35mm Eastman Print is in black and white. Additionally, when Shepard uses sepia tinting, the whole screen, including the borders (since the resolution is 1920x1080 regardless of aspect ratio), is sepia toned on the Image Blu-ray.  This was fixed for the Kino Blu-ray.  Note that below that the Kino 20fps uses the same tinting choices as the 24fps Kino and Image sources, they all derive from the same source.  David Shepard has confirmed that the telecine they worked from was in black and white except for the Technicolor footage. Here are the differences :

1.     Shepard Eastman

Opening Titles - Green

Man with a Lantern - Red

Intertitle - "Sanctuary of Song Lovers..." - White (untinted)

Exterior of Opera House - Blue

Grand Staircase - Sepia

Cellars w/Florine - Orange (24fps) / Sepia (20fps)

Scene Dock 3rd Cellar - Green

Florine & Simon Bouquet - Sepia

Intertitle - "From hidden places" - White

First Scene with Phantom behind Christine's Mirror - Sepia for Christine, Green for Phantom (including respective intertitles)

Second Scene with Carlotta & Managers - Sepia

Phantom in Chandelier Scene  & Intertitle - Green

Second Scene with Phantom behind Christine's Mirror - Sepia for Christine, Green for Phantom (including intertitles)

Christine Meets the Phantom - Green

Christine Descends the Staircase - Sepia (just after the piece of sprocket)

Christine Daae' Disappears - Red

Christine Awakens in Lair - Sepia

Raoul Reads Christine's Note - White

Bal Masque - Technicolor

Rooftop Scene - Blue

Christine and Raoul Encounter Ledoux - Sepia

Raoul Baroche Scene - Blue

Faust Opening - Sepia

Raoul, Ledoux and Phillipe in Cellars -

Torture Chamber - Green

Phantom's Lair - Sepia (Generally)

Phantom swims in the Black Lake - Green

Mob Outside Opera - Blue

Heated Torture Chamber - Red & Yellow

Gunpowder Room - Green

Mob in Cellars - Orange (until they get to the Phantom's door)

Phantom's Carriage Ride - Blue

Finis - Sepia

2.     Brownlow Eastman

Opening Credits - Blue

Opera Staircase - Sepia

Ballet Scenes - Red

Manager's Office - Sepia

Opera Basement w/Florine - Purple

Florine & Simon Bouquet - Sepia

Phantom Speaks to Christine - Purple (Phantom's Shots and Intertitles only)

Phantom Removes Chandelier Rope and Intertitle - Purple

Christine & Phantom in Cellars - Purple

Phantom's Lair - Light Green or White (untinted)

Christine Disappears & Christine's Room in Lair- Sepia

Raoul Reads Christine's Note - Sepia

Bal Masque - Technicolor

Rooftop Scene - Blue with Green Intertitles

Bal Masque - Technicolor (Recolorized)

Ledoux at Prefect's Office - Sepia

Raoul's Baroche - Blue

Opera Stage - Sepia

Florine Finds Joseph's Body - Purple

Opera Stage - Sepia

Raoul, Ledoux & Phillipe in Cellars - Purple

Phantom's Lair - Light Green

Torture Chamber - Purple

Torture Chamber Activated - Sepia

Mob Outside Opera - Blue

Gunpowder Room - Purple

Mob in Cellars & Lair - Red

Phantom's Carriage Ride - Blue

3.    Image/Kino Blu Hampton

Opening - Blue

Exterior of Opera House - Sepia

Christine Meets the Phantom - Blue

Phantom's Lair - Sepia

Phantom Unmasked - Green

Raoul's Message - Blue

Bal Masque - Sepia

Raoul and Christine Evade Phantom - Blueish White

Return to Bal Masque - Light Red

Ledoux in Prefect's Office - Sepia

Raoul, Ledoux & Phillipe in the Cellars - Blueish White

Until :

Phantom Demands Christine Bring Him Love - Sepia

Raoul & Ledoux Fall into the Torture Chamber - Bluish White

Phantom Returns to His Lair - Sepia

Phantom's Carriage Ride - Blue to Bluish White

Honeymoon at Viroflay - Sepia (Not including intertitle)

4.    Killiam Film Classics Eastman

Opening - Blue

Opera Staircase - Purple

Manager's Office - Sepia

Opera Stage - Purple

Box 5 Exterior - Sepia

Box 5 Interior - Purple

Opera Basement - Purple

Christine's Dressing Room - Sepia

Phantom Speaks to Christine - Green (Phantom's Shots and Intertitles only)

Phantom Removes Chandelier Rope and Intertitle - Green

Outside Christine's Dressing Room - Sepia

Christine & Phantom in Cellars & Lair - Green

Christine Disappears - Sepia

Christine's Room in Lair - Green

Raoul Reads Christine's Note - Sepia

Bal Masque & Opera Upper Floors - Purple (Technicolor footage not used)

Rooftop Scene - Blue (no Handschiegl)

Ledoux at Prefect's Office - Sepia

Raoul's Baroche - Blue

Florine Finds Joseph's Body - Purple

Raoul, Ledoux & Phillipe in the Cellars & Torture Chamber- Green

Mob Outside Opera & Chase, Finis and End Credits - Blue

5.   Observations

Brownlow is more consistent with its tinting than Shepard.  All outside evening scenes are blue and all opera cellar scenes are purple with only one exception for each.  Indoor scenes are sepia with the exception of the ballet and the phantom's lair.  Beginning credits and end title are blue.  The green in the Phantom's Lair scenes is so light as to easily confuse it for not being colorized at all.  Apparently the different tints in the rooftop scene may have been original to the print, as it is the only scene where the intertitles are a different color than the action and all the speakers are in the same room (contrast to Christine and the Phantom talking to her behind the mirror when she is in her room).

Brownlow is very consistent in tinting with the Paul Killiam Film Classics version I grew up with.  The Killiam Eastman Print has a restoration credit to Paul Malkames.  Malkemes was a noted film preservationist who helped preserve dozens of silent films and some early sound films like the 70mm version of The Big Trail, which is notable as being an early sound film shot in widescreen, on large gauge film and John Wayne's first starring role.  Malkemes was an expert in silent film cinematography and well-qualified to judge tint.  His tinting is very simple, blue for outside the opera, sepia for rooms and offices, purple for the opera stage and cellars (initially) and green for anything having the phantom in it and the cellars after Christine's abduction from the stage.

Shepard's tinting takes a more dynamic approach at times, although there is more sepia than in Brownlow's. In both restorations we are faced with the respective restorer's choices regarding tinting.  The major choices are at least fifteen years old for both.  However, there are obvious errors in the Shepard versions as two intertitles and one short scene identified in above are not tinted and seemingly should be.  I would love to know the decisions behind each restorer's tinting choices.  While the fifth revised shooting script contains tinting indications, this does not necessarily mean they were followed through to the General Release.  The fifth revised shooting script's tints are very simple, blue for nighttime outdoors, amber for the grand staircase, opera stage and boxes, office and dressing rooms and the Phantom's lair, green for the cellars and a little red in the torture chamber.   

The Image Blu-ray Hampton Print seems like someone started to tint the film but did not finish.  Virtually all the film is in sepia or in a bluish white that barely looks like tint at all.  With sepia scenes, the color occasionally flickers to purple or red.  There are very few indications that someone made a defensible choice of tinting.  Interestingly, the switch to green when Christine pulls the mask off the Phantom's face is the only time where an intentional choice appears to have been made, but one I have never seen in any other print or version of the film.  Considering the standard resolution of the film, the tinting makes it slightly harder to distinguish detail.  

H.     Conclusion

In an era of high definition televisions and Blu-ray players, Phantom is well-served with two quality, accessible releases that, between them, eliminate any need to keep DVDs, except for the extras on the Milestone and Reelclassics DVDs.

Appendix - Screen Captures

Milestone Eastman Print











Milestone Hampton Print








Image Blu-ray Eastman Print (20fps Version)












Image Blu-ray Hampton Print








BFI Blu-ray Eastman Print











BFI Hampton Print








Miscellaneous Captures


BFI Blu-ray Talkie Re-release Christine Reel 5
BFI Blu-ray Talkie Re-release Phantom and Servant
BFI Blu-ray Talkie Re-release Raoul in Christine's Dessing Room
BFI Blu-ray Eastman Print Man with a Lantern
Image Blu-ray Eastman Print Man with a Lantern
Image Blu-ray Hampton Print Man with a Lantern
Milestone DVD Hampton Print Man with a Lantern
BFI Hampton - Christine in her Bedroom (Compare with BFI Eastman Print Shot #8)
Griggs Moviedrome Release Credits #1 (shown after Chaney/Philbin/Kerry Credit

Griggs Moviedrome Release Credits #2 (shown at the end of the film)

Killiam Film Classics Release Credit #1 (shown before original main titles)
Killiam Film Classics Release Credit #2 (shown before original main titles)
Killiam Film Classics Release Credit #3 (shown before original main titles)