Tallima: I understand the feeling, I think. And as amok said, there is less real-ness when an artists' perception goes into it. Nonetheless, it helps my brain establish that these are real things from not long ago vs historical artifacts.
AngryAlien: in color the magic is gone and all that is left is a pic that someone could have taken with a mobile phone just yesterday.
Shaolin_sKunk: That's exactly why it works for me, though, it turns me around from thinking of these people as just a part of history far removed from my own to people I could have been actually talking to.
It's not like anyone's suggesting that we replace all the B&W photos with this stuff it's just a very effective way of bringing the reality of living in that time home to people. Instead of seeing Nazis standing in rank and thinking "Oh yeah, that happened once" I find myself feeling a little frightened because the reality of what this group of people accomplished is easier to relate to my contemporary experience of world events.
Maybe this is a question of personal experience. I am almost 40 now and when I grew up b/w pictures were still pretty common. Lots of my childhood pictures are in b/w and there is not one single picture of my parents and grandparents in color. And when my dad gave me his old reflex camera, I used to make and develop lots of pictures myself and many of them were in b/w. I often used b/w when I wanted to focus on the essential.
So I guess my brain is more used to process b/w pictures and, in a way, more able to connect them with reality. I guess you are a bit younger than I am and, with different experiences you have made, you might see things differently.
But maybe this is just the case for the pictures that were clourized afterwards. I have seen WW2 footage and pictures, for instance, that was originally shot in color and they don´t have the "less real" effect on me. Maybe it is just that I am so familiar with the original b/w shots, that seeing them in color feels wrong.