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#1 |
Member
May 2007
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An actual quote from someone hanging over my shoulder watching a movie ("Wings of Honneamise") remastered for Blu-ray. He didn't think the film grain was actually part of the image: he thought it was evidence that this HD stuff wasn't all that at and a bag of chips.
Has anyone else experienced anything like this? I worry that in a couple of years people are going to think film grain is this horrible intolerable eyesore, the way some people seemed to think black-and-white film was "missing" something and had to have color applied to it to be worth watching. |
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#2 |
Special Member
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I haven't experienced this first-hand, but I do know that there is a vast difference between film grain and B&W pictures. Film grain, IMHO, is not desirable, does not add character to a film, and I don't believe (with the exception of certain scenes in a movie to indicate age of a section of film, like flashbacks or memory scenes) that any director desires to see it in their film.
Yes, it is nastalgic to see a certain amount of grain in some earlier films, but quite frankly, I think the public, film afficianados, and directors will all agree, if it can be removed without affecting the quality of the piece, then do it! |
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#3 |
Member
May 2007
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Well, the problem is that the vast majority of the time it's not possible to remove it without adversely affecting the quality of the image. (The Wellspring DVD reissue of "Ran" might serve a good example of this: IIRC, they applied so much denoising and post-processing to the image that the result looked even worse than the original non-anamorphic Fox Lorber version.)
If a disc of a movie is grainy because it was struck from a multi-generational print, that's one thing, and that should be fixed if possible. If it's grainy because that's the way it looks, well, that's something else. |
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#4 |
Expert Member
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grain is only bad if it's un-intentional... Spielberg added grain to Schindler's List to make it look old. Grain was also added to 300, Sin City and Man on Fire to make the movies look gritty. Without grain, many movies will look like home videos.
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#5 | |
Site Manager
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added
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![]() I guess it's worthless if I link those threads again. People will forever think film based photographic images are some kind of airy recording of photons in ether, having grown up watching DVDs and CGI and shooting with 5 Megapixel cameras and will never understand what grain is. |
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#6 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#7 | |
Active Member
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#8 |
Active Member
Jan 2008
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#9 |
Special Member
Aug 2007
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Grain was something of a necessary evil in the days before computer special effects/CGI. On old films you can often predict when an optical effect is about to happen, when there is a reel change and the picture is suddenly grainy. Optical effects often suffered through multi generations before going to a master.
That is why 2001 - A Space Odyssey is such a remarkable film. All of those effects are mechanical and optical. No CGI at all. |
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#10 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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The grain was caused by a specific B&W film stock that was used. The higher the film speed, the grainier the result would be. If you shoot photos with ISO400 35mm film and without adequate lights, you're gonna get grain. ISO100 and200 had finer grain.
fuad |
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#11 | |
Power Member
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Unless the director or the DP specifically asks that the grain be removed from the video transfer, though, I really have a problem with messing with the way a film looks just to appease people who think film should look like video and not like film. Worse, the eventual outcome of excessive grain removal is typically a softer image, with DNR and EE effects to boot. |
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#13 |
Senior Member
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I agree with the OP. Film grain is the number one complaint I hear from people who don't understand High Definition. It is something we will be hearing more and more about as people buy into High Def.
Frankly, I could do without it. Coming out of film school in my recent past, I can attest that there are film stocks and lenses that could be used that result in almost no appreciable film grain. However, most DP's and Directors view film grain as a part of their painters pallet. Believe me, if there is film grain in the image, it is there for only two reasons. 1) the director wanted it that way. or 2) the DP (Director of Photography) doesn't know what the hell he's doing. Most directors around the world view film grain with a warm fuzzy feeling in their hearts. It gives them a sense of nostalgia for the days when film stocks were frankly shite. They remember fondly watching the deteriorated film prints of their youth. Therefore, if the movies the director loves are plagued by film grain, the movies the director will make himself must look the same. Film grain equals cinema in their minds. As newer movies come out, and Blu-ray takes a bigger share of the home video pie, directors will start to come around. Newer films will look cleaner and clearer than ever before. Directors don't like to be criticized for their films, and more movies will make use of the better film stocks, and lenses. Blu-ray will have an impact in Hollywood. Directors aren't used to this level of scrutiny of their films that High Def offers. Directors will come to know that Blu-ray is where their films will live for all to see. When that happens you can be certain film grain will begin to die. |
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#14 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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This kinda thread cracks me up. If I see one movie with grain and one without, I prefer the PQ of the one without.
If its an old movie then so be it, its acceptable. But in this day and age if one movie director can choose a stock that has no grain, then everyone else should choose this stock. Its not rocket science. |
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#15 | |
Banned
Jul 2007
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#16 | |
Banned
Jul 2007
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Or better stick to noise and grain free CGI and animation. There you have only compression noise to fear. |
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#17 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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If all my movies look like Silver surfer or Bridge to Teribithia with little to no grain. Then so be it. This is the quality I expect in every movie, not just some.
1080p doesn't mean diddly doo without a good clean master. If you bought a new car and it had specs in the paint and the salesman said "Ahh, that would be the kind of paint used".. I'd expect you'd walk away immediately without hearing further explanation. Thats exactly how 99% of the consumers feel about HD. ![]() |
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#18 |
Power Member
Sep 2006
B.C. Canada
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I'm sick of all the threads about grain in the picture. Use the search button and get over it. Thats part of the picture.
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#19 |
Active Member
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I don't have any problem with grain. I want to see the movie as the director intended it to look or how it looked when originally released. What I have a problem with is sub-par transfers that do not address the artifacts such as "The Omega Man" which had several scenes where there were noticable artifacts that detracted from watching the movie. To break it down George Bush style "Grain is good, artifacts bad. Read my lips people, no new artifacts."
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#20 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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Then again unless you have the original film from the camera the reason one is grain less and the other not could have to do with a post processing decision or over compressed files on disk that lose grain and other minute details that you want with HD. |
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