The official release has a teal-and-orange push. The VHS rip is pink . Faded, bleeding, sunburnt pink. Faces look like porcelain dolls left in a window. It actually mirrors the autochrome photography of the 1910s better than the modern scan does. The modern scan wants you to see it as a movie. The VHS rip wants you to see it as a decaying photograph.
The "official" cuts removed the lingering shots of the "purchase" auction. They trimmed the nude portraits. Most critically, they shortened the sequence where Brook Shields’ character dances for the photographer Bellocq—reducing it from a psychological study of voyeurism into a quick montage. Then came the bootleggers. Pretty Baby 1978 Original vhs rip - UNCUT- 1
Have you seen this cut? Did you own the original Video Treasures clamshell? Let me know in the comments—but keep the discourse academic, please. To be perfectly clear, this blog post discusses the preservation of film history and the specific analog qualities of VHS degradation. The film’s subject matter is difficult; the format does not excuse the content, but it does contextualize the censorship war of the 1980s. Watch responsibly. The official release has a teal-and-orange push
Set in 1917 New Orleans, the film follows Violet (a 12-year-old Brooke Shields) growing up in a legal brothel run by Professor (Antonio Fargas) and ruled by the madam Nell (Frances Faye). It is uncomfortable. It is supposed to be. Faces look like porcelain dolls left in a window