I was never sure if CJ was right about that. In the DVD I have there's a scene with LVC at night listening as the construction of the boats is going on. Then there's a cut to the men crossing the river the next day. It plays perfectly well
More thoughts on BarqueroAnyway I watched the film again and noticed that there may have been a few cuts.Mountian Phil first appearence may have been trimmed for all we see is him pulling a bowie knife out of a body, and nothing leading up to it.Lee Van Cleef & Mariette Hartley's "lust in the dust" sequence must have been trimmedsince this scene is not in the film in this version: (I used to have a link to a pic)Another cut is right before the barge battle, you see Remy's gang building their rafts and it immediately cuts to the two Remy rafts oaring their way across the river towards the barqueros barge. Then you cut again to the opposite side of the river and all the squatters are hunkered down in the ferry already and waiting. So there must have been a sequence where Travis figuers out what Remys has planned and gets all the squatters into the ferry.
Interesting if it was shot in matte frame, It does look slightly blurry in some LVC/Hartley closeups.Another crop at the end when Oates gets shot we don't see his body on the dock just his hat brim sticking up, you'd think it was cropped at the bottom.
I am not certain if I'd have noticed a (possible) missing scene on my own; but when CJ sent me the DVD, he said, Did you notice the missing scene? (Not certain if he said it before or after I watched the movie - I think it was after) but once he asked me, I replied, "Oh, you must mean the raft scene," and he said yeah. So I can't know whether it is something that I would have noticed or if it would have bothered me on my own if CJ hadn't mentioned anything to me about a missing scene.
So now you're saying you never read this thread before watching the DVD? I call BS on that.
The AVC encoded image (1.85:1 aspect ratio) presentation is perhaps the most enticing "Barquero" has ever looked, but this low-budget effort doesn't make it easy on HD expectations. Grain is erratic, with fluctuating levels of intensity that tend to break the visual flow of shots, offering a few noisy bursts along the way. The feature's second half utilizes day for night processing, which tends to dilute everything filmic about the frame, with the BD lacking intensity, though it's an inherently cinematographic problem. In the daylight, fine detail emerges on sweaty faces and the spare construction of the riverside town. Textures are acceptable, isolating creases and woodwork, with a reasonable amount of sharpness to sustain clarity. Colors are adequate as well, with secure skintones and a nice overview of costuming, while outdoorsy hues sustain intent. Delineation runs into photography limitations (contrast tends to lose stability during the aforementioned "sundown" hours), but doesn't entirely solidify. Print is in encouraging shape, with only a few marks of damage detected.
4. Musical Score. It was ok. Nothing special. Not great or bad.
If you watch Eastwood's Hang 'em High you'll notice a similarity with the score, if I remember right.