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#1 |
Banned
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https://www.imaxenhanced.com/
With this newly minted partnership with DTS, IMAX Enhanced is being implemented by Sony and Paramount Studios to start (besides distributors of IMAX films on home media) with Denon/Marantz onboard as the initial A/V electronics manufacturers including IMAX Enhanced decoding. Some industry rags speculate that besides video image processing, this could be tied to a small update to the DTS: X codec with one or two added overhead channels (DTS: X currently does not use 3D pannable objects and speaker layout scalability like Dolby Atmos, acting more like a channel-based codec) to more closely comport with IMAX audio systems and mixing styles. THREE of my biggest concerns are these: 1) Applying IMAX's use of Edge Enhancement to upscale standard, non IMAX photographed movies to a larger screen. They call it a "proprietary post-processing process developed by IMAX." Remember "The Dark Knight" Blu-ray? All 35mm sequences were slathered with heavy edge enhancement and the look was atrociously bad because Warner used the IMAX master. 2) The heavy hand of DNR strikes again? They state it this way: "This advanced process accurately reduces noise and grain under the filmmaker’s guidance to best optimize the content for a much higher quality..." 3) Re-formatting scope movies to 1.78:1 if they happen to have been shown in an IMAX theater regardless of the filmmakers' intent. IMAX Enhanced's website explains it as seeing "more" of the picture. We already went through the age of content "formatted to fit your TV" crap, and now it's back?? On a more practical consumer note, do we need yet another set of "standards" mucking up the works? It sounds like desperation on the part of DTS and IMAX to stay relevant in this new age of 4k and add another layer of licensing fees to the roster. What say you? |
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#3 |
Blu-ray Knight
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From the website, it looks like they're trying to fill the hole that the THX consumer program left. The problem (for them) is that the reason THX left that hole is that it wasn't very big.
I don't foresee any great result of this program. ... and if a home implementation of DMR has anything to do with this, I will avoid it like the plague it would be. |
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Thanks given by: |
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#4 | |
Banned
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Besides altering aspect ratios and potentially adding heavier EE and DNR to 4k masters?? |
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#6 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (09-05-2018), WBMakeVMarsMovieNOW (09-06-2018) |
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#8 |
Blu-ray Knight
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I'm going to judge that by their track record and remain skeptical until I see some indication that they can do something that isn't aesthetically horrifying.
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#10 | |
Banned
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I'm not even saying my assumption is right. I just think if they're trying to do this legitimately, it'll be a process that doesn't heed results like T2/The Predator UHE. |
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#11 |
Banned
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#12 | |
Banned
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Somehow I don't feel any better. Their DMR process is keyed to IMMENSE screens, not home systems. The two don't jibe. I already mentioned a film on Blu-ray that specifically used an IMAX created master and it looked like shit. |
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#15 | |
Banned
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If they're changing scope ratio films to 16x9 then I'm out before they already started irrespective of a supposed update to DTS: X. |
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#16 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Agreed. I was kind of freaked out when I decided to watch M:I Fallout in both formats since I was worried I'd be torn between the two for all future releases, but Dolby Cinema was a much better presentation. I'm fully committed to DC moving forward.
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#18 | |
Banned
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The picture "enhancements" sure don't sound like they'll be optional. If EE and DNR or an aspect ratio change are baked in to the master, you can't turn them off with a button push. |
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#19 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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If it's a more premium version of a movie on top of UHD and costs $3-$5 more (imagine a silver UHD case but with the IMAX logo oooooooh) and is a limited edition guarenteed profitable print run *and* the regular UHD with original aspect ratio (as most IMAX movies today are just opened up to 1.90 with little regard to framing) is available as well for purists, then I don't mind.
Hell, I'll buy both just to compare. This is actually genius. |
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#20 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The hardware is the most concerning thing. Look at the last question on the FAQ where it talks about taking advantage of Imax enhanced using a UHD disc/stream and it says that you won't get the same high quality experience if you don't have an IMAX Enhanced device. It might be software related like DV, or who knows what else.
Now average joes might choose an IMAX TV that doesn't have 'black bars' over non Imax DV/UHD/HDR madness... so there's that. |
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