Getting a redub and an uncensored sub, and the last season, which is awesome. I'm enjoying this news. I wonder if they'll redo the three movies, as well (Promise Of The Rose, to me, is one of the better all around animated movies around, and I would love to see it in it's full, uncut form).
I'm sure they will redo the three movies, because they mentioned that they have them, as well as all the Specials. The movie dubs are owned by
Pioneer (dead)
Geneon (dead) some lawyer, and
DiC (dead) some other lawyer (actually, this last one is ponies), so if Viz wants to use the old dub they'll have to sort out some mess and pay some lawyers for the privilege of having box 11/10 stand out and look different from their other ten boxes. A clean slate is simply better and easier.
Promise of the Rose was available in several forms, cut dub VHS, uncut dub VHS (visually uncut, verbally... it was still the dub), uncut subbed VHS, and dual audio DVD. The cut dub was the only version
not preserved on DVD.
The American release was also interesting because the movies were animated by the TV staff, using the TV equipment, which meant that they made them in 4:3 with the intention of showing them in widescreen in the theater and DVD releases. But somehow, Toei neglectfully gave Pioneer a set of pre-widescreen masters to use, so we got to see something that even Japan hadn't seen, even if that made it less-than-ideal to try and enjoy the theater-style experience on DVD, as their creators intended.
It seems likely that the movies are going to be widescreen this time around.
A note about the BluRays, for those who didn't notice:
So this show's coming out on Bluray and it's an old show from the 90s, just like Ranma. What kind of restoration are we talking about here?
Charlene: In 2009, there was a restoration done. Those are the very best materials available for Sailor Moon, and it is a 90s shojo anime, so there are challenges there. But we've been working with some companies that are really great at what they do and they've developed a way to not just do the inverse telecine but to really remaster that video. It looks significantly better than any other DVD that's come out, lots of care was put into it.
Do you see where it says "inverse telecine"? That might be more commonly known as "de-interlacing".
The animation cels were never interlaced. The film that recorded those cels was never interlaced. TV broadcasts were interlaced. DVD is interlaced.
Viz's source material is Japan's 2009 DVD, not the film that was restored to make those DVDs. You can't "remaster" a DVD. You can "make it look better" (subjectively speaking) by applying blurring and sharpening filters to it, but you'll never draw out more than what was stored in the DVD. In fact, by applying filters you're pretty much doomed to end up with less. But we can take comfort knowing that they're not going to go anywhere near as crazy with the filters as Funimation did with DBZ.
The BluRays (which are going to come with the collectors version box sets) are going to be "upscales", and nothing to get excited about. They're basically the DVDs, doubled from 480i to 480p, then blown up to 1080p, with filters to remove the jaggies.
If you want to get the cheaper DVD box sets, you can do so, comfortable in the knowledge that you won't be seeing anything less than what the people who have the BluRays are seeing, although some people might prefer the way the picture is presented on the BluRays.