I had a co-worker that once worked for the Spectradyne(SP?) company that provided the pay-to-view movies in hotels and motels on one-inch videotapes, and he often talked about differences in those tapes compared to other versions he viewed in theaters.
I also wonder if the comment specifically means The Movie Channel, or a cable movie channel in general, because HBO was well known for broadcasting movies without the specified "mask".
What is "the mask"? Well, if you watch some of TMZ or The Discovery Channel, you will occasionally see the view of the camera operator, which shows several rectangles on the screen. Those indicate where the film can be masked down to the center view's rectangle, or other larger views that include more of the original image. In the HBO broadcast of the Goldie Hawn and Bert Reynold's movie BEST FRIENDS, more than half of Goldie Hawn's topless scenes from the HBO version are NOT topless scenes in the VHS, laserdisc, and DVD version of the movie, which are the same, ("take a shower with me"), and are not showing the lowest part of the frame masked from the HBO version (which I videotaped from the cable TV broadcast). That change directly affects the emotional tone of the entire movie, and the mask *should have been left off* IMHO.
Another case of *revisions* to a movie, in spite of the cover sticker "Uncensored!" description, is the Disney movie FANTASIA. Yes, Disney lied about changing a specific sequence for "political correctness" in the segment with the centaurs in The Rites of Spring. Since the animation was exquisitly intertwined with the musical score, simply cutting frames out would not be a workable solution, so they essentially cut the edited portions into four quadrants, and expanded the upper right quadrant to fill the frame, leaving the music intact; (a version of pan-and-scan). How can I make such a claim? Easily when you have a version of the movie with large grain on the affected frames, and they stand out compared to the grain both before and after the edited frames! That coarse grain was cleaned up in the DVD versions and the VHS versions. But, they did have versions of the pre-cleanup that made it to the public... possibly they were originally rental versions. What I cannot demonstrate is the original Sunday night Disney TV show (Yes, 'way back then!), that I remember seeing as a child; (home VCR's didn't exist then.) However, an eBay seller offerred a VHS copy of a promotional preview that did have the unmodified sequence, but it sold for BIG bucks! (Hint, the changed section was on Sunday TV before Dr. King Jr. had his dream...) So, there IS the question of whether essentially deleting/masking most of some frames actually constitutes "censoring" the film... you decide.
Most people do not know that FANTASIA was the first stereo theater movie, and it was presented in the early 1930's! It was not well received at the time, and didn't become popular until quite a bit later. (There were suggestions that the artists were on drugs... and there was the great depression too)
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