Note: This is part of an E-mail and I was describing things to a few friends. So it is written a little differently then if I had intended it for the Nitrateville audience.

I got both the WINGS DVD and Blu-ray today. Just finished watching the movie. The DVD plays fine in my two month old Blu-ray player, on my 10 year old TV. For what ever reason The Blu-ray does not read at all. No picture, no audio of any kind.

I do not know why? The bad thing is that the documentary on restoring the film is only on the Blu-ray. The first thing I had intended to watch. There are three documentaries on the Blu-ray. Just one of the DVD. Since I don't have another Blu-ray player there is no way that I can check to see if the disc is defective at this time.
The recreated J. S. Zamecnik 1927 Orchestral score is very good. At times excellent. I won't say that it isn't. Nevertheless, I am still partial to the Carl Davis score overall. Maybe partly because I have heard it allot more times. The two musical scores were approached very differently. There is more drama to the Davis score, more comedy it seems to the Zamecnik one. Not that it is lacking in the dramatic in any way. I just wish the Davis score was also included. It's just to outstanding to be forgotten. Fredric Hodges Piano solo during the scene where Richard Arlen is bidding his family Farewell, just doesn't have the same punch of the two pieces that Carl Davis had composed for this sequence. I can't understand why they went with no other instruments during this entire key scene in the film. Like the Photoplay Productions Presentation, the majority of this print is tinted gold. With a little more Blue than previously and some Amber. They also replicated the stencil color process on numerous scenes. Including were we see the French, America, and British flags flying. A striking effect. Not vivid colors, it looked pretty vintage. The print is clearly much better at times than I have seen, other times it is not markedly improved over the Photoplay version, which would have looked great if I had a recording from a better source in it's own right.
There are some scenes with allot of sound effects, but they are well done and do not overpower the music or the action on screen. Very impressive work. This is a spectacular release and I am amazed at the rave reviews the movie itself has been getting all over the place. Mostly, if not exclusively from people who clearly have never seen the film before. I mean
WINGS is good, but not that good. I rank it several notches below
THE BIG PARADE, and now more than ever Warner's needs to seriously get cracking. Otherwise, by default
WINGS reputation is bound to escalate, while
THE BIG PARADE will see it's status continue to fade. They must not let that happen. There is no reason whatsoever that it should happen. With any luck, the success of
THE ARTIST will encourage more major Silent film releases from the big studios soon.
I'm very impressed with the pride that people at Paramount appear to have taken in this project. That is great to hear, and I can't thank you enough. But Brian McKechnie and others at Paramount have to understand that they have many other great Silents stashed in the archive. Starting with the original 1926 version of
BEAU GESTE. A fully restored
BEAU GESTE complete with the original Hugo Risenfeld score would truly be another highly unexpected dream come true.