On Imperfections in Films
Films, even great films, are imperfect beasts... shots in a given scene are often pieced together from different days shooting, or different locations, or, as in Psycho repeatedly, from locations together with soundstages. It's possible then to regard the minor seams that show and flow from the basic realities of film production as imperfections to be overcome. This is evidently what David Fincher thinks. A new upgrade of Seven (1995) for 4K Blu-ray has been released. The following link has some of the details
https://www.movie-censorship.com/report.php?ID=546224
I recommend scrolling down to the bottom of the document where a lot of the changes to the final main scene in the movie are detailed. There's way too much for me to discuss, but two points stick out.
1. The climax of Seven was filmed over several days with slightly different lighting conditions and with one day much less cloudy than the rest. To the extent I processed this in the theater and in subsequent viewings I *liked* the cloudless shots - they had a slighted heightened feel to them like we were in John Doe's head/world. That's now gone and Fincher has inserted uniformly cloudy skies in every shot. (Grrr...)
2. The document (about a page up from the bottom) includes 4 frames from an original 35mm print of Seven (i.e. from the climax) to show how far Seven has drifted in color palette, contrast levels, etc. in its various DVD, Blu-Ray, and now 4K presentations. Faces weren't originally swathed in shadow in the scene, and so forth. So maybe the uniformity of cloud cover between shots isn't the most pressing issue. The question, 'What then is the final film these days?' is.