Peewee Piemonte
2 Films
Peewee Piemonte
2 Included Films

Two time Emmy winner and four time Emmy nominee Peewee Piemonte is a veteran in the Entertainment industry. From humble beginnings in the Bronx, Peewee earned his nickname in the 4th grade, for being the biggest kid in school. He learned to accept and turn his size into an asset, winning his class in bodybuilding in the JR America. Success in bodybuilding made for a seamless transition into commercials, where Peewee began his entertainment industry career. It was on a commercial shoot where the athlete was introduced to stunts and stuntmen. At that moment, his focus became turning winning athleticism into making top-tier action for television and film. Skill , build and determination allowed for a quickly thriving career. And Peewee hasn't slowed down since. He has received two EMMY wins. One in 2011 and another Emmy in 2012 for Outstanding Stunt Coordination, Drama Series. Both for SouthLand. Peewee Piemonte has virtually done it all. Traversing from stuntman to stunt coordinator, to second unit director , and now award winning Director for his emotional feature "Last Writes". His Best Director Award was a product of the great performance he received from legendary actor, Lance Henriksen's portrayal of Robert Service, hiding his love affair with a soldier in the war in 1941. Peewee is also a former Vice President and now Lifetime Member of the Stuntmen's Association of Motion Pictures (S.A.M.P.)

Director: Andrew Davis
Arrow 4K Blu-ray see caps
It's weird. Brightly lit scenes have zero grain. They look plenty detailed and not at all waxy and lifeless, but there's no grain. Darker scenes have a fine layer of it as befits the general rule of thumb with film. Either they shot this on the 50-speed EXR stock of the day - virtually grainless in the right conditions - or it's been expertly 'grain managed'. I say 'expertly' becuz there's no trailing artefacts, no sticky grain that I can see, it's some of the best such treatment I've ever seen. And IF it has been I can only think the edict came down from the director himself.
Arrow 4K Blu-ray omitted the original 5.1 track for a 2.0 and Atmos.US DVD has the DD5.1For Stereo track: Warner Home Video JPN LaserDisc [NJWL-12420]

Director: Andrew Davis
Arrow 4K Blu-ray see caps
It's weird. Brightly lit scenes have zero grain. They look plenty detailed and not at all waxy and lifeless, but there's no grain. Darker scenes have a fine layer of it as befits the general rule of thumb with film. Either they shot this on the 50-speed EXR stock of the day - virtually grainless in the right conditions - or it's been expertly 'grain managed'. I say 'expertly' becuz there's no trailing artefacts, no sticky grain that I can see, it's some of the best such treatment I've ever seen. And IF it has been I can only think the edict came down from the director himself.
Arrow 4K Blu-ray omitted the original 5.1 track for a 2.0 and Atmos.US DVD has the DD5.1For Stereo track: Warner Home Video JPN LaserDisc [NJWL-12420]

Director: Joel Schumacher
Dolby Stereo SR: WB LaserDisc (best audio mix of the film)
Dolby 5.1: WB LaserDisc AC3, WB DVD
2005 5.1 retransfer: WB DVD Dolby and DTS, WB Blu-ray TrueHD
4K Blu-ray has Atmos remixes with new effects and changes. The original matrix surround track is better mixed than the 5.1 discrete with more surround and low end engagement amazingly. It also hides the extensive ADR a bit due to the inherent quality dip comparing matrix to discrete formats.

Director: Joel Schumacher
Dolby Stereo SR: WB LaserDisc (best audio mix of the film)
Dolby 5.1: WB LaserDisc AC3, WB DVD
2005 5.1 retransfer: WB DVD Dolby and DTS, WB Blu-ray TrueHD
4K Blu-ray has Atmos remixes with new effects and changes. The original matrix surround track is better mixed than the 5.1 discrete with more surround and low end engagement amazingly. It also hides the extensive ADR a bit due to the inherent quality dip comparing matrix to discrete formats.
2 films