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by smitelli 541 days ago
They did that with film too. The editors sliced up a copy of the developed film, called a “workprint,” spliced it all back together, and produced a list of numerical edit points as they went along.

Then a person called the negative cutter would go through the list, duplicate the editing decisions on a high-quality negative without the generational loss, and that would go on to become the final print.

That’s why sometimes you’ll see a deleted scene from a movie whose picture quality looks quite poor. That was most likely taken from the workprint, and never went through negative cutting or any finishing.

1 comments

Great input on the low quality deleted scene, never made sense to me!
same. I always wondered if the proper hq film for some of those scenes is stored away somewhere.