>> but it is the published ones that will capture the attention and become fixed in the mind as the "proper" ones.
And a good thing too. Very difficult to relate to the horror when it's almost impossibly crackly black and white. When it's been smoothed out, and in colour, makes it all seem so much closer.
The crackly b&w may be 'proper' but they still exist in original form, and the improved is much easier to associate with. Moreover, it means a lot more people will watch it. Have you actually seen bits of the film?
www.youtube.com/watch?v=zRed-Ri9IpI
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