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#2523 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Damn....you know what? Something felt a *little* off about that shot, and I couldn't tell until now. It's amazing how all these motion tracking and compositing software have advanced. |
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#2524 |
Blu-ray Prince
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I thought it was a pointless 3D conversion / presentation - even with the tremendous light output.
LFE was powerful, but the mixing in 12-channel sound was sub par, use of the ceiling speakers were practically non-existent. I'd say maybe 25 people - not crowded at all. |
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#2525 |
Power Member
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The truck flip scene in TDK isn't as impressive as it might be in 15/70 because the truck doesn't fill the screen top to bottom as it goes over. It's shot too far away. This could have been fixed by cutting off information on the sides for the IMAX version and keeping it there for the regular versions.
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#2526 | |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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Thanks given by: | Blu-Malibu2009 (06-14-2017), UltraMario9 (06-14-2017) |
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#2527 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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That 'IMAX' promo shot itself is a frankensteined still, that's some geninely good detective work there, but it's not a smoking gun that the IMAX scenes were finished in anything less than 1.44. Last edited by Geoff D; 06-12-2017 at 07:47 PM. |
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#2529 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Ok thanks |
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#2530 | |
Banned
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The last time I went to an IMAX showing was in September 2016 to watch Independence Day: Resurgence in 3D. I've gone to the theaters 29 times since then and I've always watched movies in 2D but IMAX/studios/theaters rarely seem to offer the option. May if IMAX 3D wasn't shoved down our throats and there were more options to watch films in IMAX 2D there would be better turnouts. Last edited by ArrestedDevelopment; 06-13-2017 at 07:36 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | Blu-Malibu2009 (06-14-2017) |
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#2531 | |
Banned
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It's more likely the ear-splitting sound levels. |
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Thanks given by: | UFAlien (06-13-2017) |
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#2534 |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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Seems less like a volume issue than a speaker issue. IMAX should be playing pretty fricken' loud. Nothing sucks the life out of a movie like seeing a 60-foot talking head whose dialogue is in competition for your attention with a whisperer (not a word) a row away.
Having said that, a lot of IMAX theaters just have speakers that seemingly can't fill their space properly. The higher they get cranked up the more unpleasant they sound and then that piercing sharp nasty sensation sets in. It's not the volume per say, it's more that the projectionist is asking the speakers to fill the room like they ought to, but they can't (hence why IMAX speakers get blown out all the time). I dunno. Big auditoriums are difficult to get good sound in to start with (can't remember the last time I heard proper dialogue levels in a big theater), even more so in an IMAX where you have to have sound levels proportional to the image size. |
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#2535 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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You don't create emotion by making everything incredibly loud. You create emotion by the difference between silence or low-level sounds and sudden high-level sounds, like a door slam or gunshot or explosion. A perfect example of the great use of dynamic range is in "Close Encounters of the Third Kind" near the end of the movie when the glass explodes in the viewing tower. The whole audience freaked out when I saw the original version of this film in 70mm at the Ziegfeld in NYC. I've been to movies where the levels (IMO) are beyond the threshold of pain. There's no reason for that. If I have to hold my ears or wear hearing protection during a movie, that's distracting me from the story. Movie sound should fill the theatre. It should be both warm and crisp at the same time and be well balanced across the entire frequency range. The film should not be "screaming" at me. In addition, when the levels are too high, there's distortion and the dialog becomes unintelligible. I could barely understand a word Tom Hardy said in "The Dark Knight Rises" and much of that was because of the over-loud and therefore distorted sound levels. One of the problems is that levels are set based upon a full theater and it's amazing how much sound is absorbed by "soft" human bodies. So if you go during the week and there's only 20-30 people in a 300 seat theater, the levels are much too loud. And the trailers are generally even louder than the feature even though Dolby tried to set standards for trailer levels years ago. But having said all that, when I saw "Gravity" in IMAX, the levels were fine and the overall sound quality was quite good. |
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#2536 |
Blu-ray Knight
Feb 2012
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This is another weekend with IMAX doing three releases in different theaters. Some are hanging onto Mummy, but looks like most are going back to Wonder Woman, and some are doing Cars 3- which is an IMAX 2D only release (wonder if that's the new standard for animated films after Lego Batman was the same).
I bet almost all (if not all) will switch to Transformers in a few days. |
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#2537 | |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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Distortion or clipping or any sort of thing like that happens when a speaker is being asked to do something it can't, whether the amp isn't jiving with it for various reasons or if the speaker itself just can't hit a frequency range properly at a certain volume level. That's when the unpleasant sensation sets in. It's kind of the hardware equivalent to how listening to a FLAC music file nice and loud is pleasant but listening to a low-quality MP3 at the same level might make your ears bleed. That's not to say some showings just have the volume too loud plain and simple. That happens, since projectionists are humans. About dynamic range- I'm not a sound mixer and I don't have much beyond broad knowledge technically, but I know when I was studying for my BA in Film, that we were taught to keep our entire mix between -12db and -6db. Editing software's are set up to tell you when you're going too quiet or too loud and what actual sound mixers are using is beyond what my school had. Point being, filmmakers aren't doing sound mixes blindly or without standards. And the standards are based on... human hearing. I think when we're talking about public viewing that it gets a little sticky, though. Moments like quiet dialogue get borderline inaudible in a space where there are 300 people all with their little quirks; ruffling a popcorn bag or moving in their seat or getting up for the bathroom or coughing or god forbid, sometimes even talking. I can't speak for how most filmmakers view this, but I know on my own mixes I tend to never let any dialogue or important sounds sit on the low end of those db guidelines. It's not because I don't like utilizing the full dynamic range, it's because I've learned the hard way that the quieter stuff gets drowned out in just about every public space I've shown one my short films, from a proper cinema to a classroom to a stage theater with a pull down screen. |
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#2538 |
Power Member
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I distinctly remember Smaug's voice at the BFI and how silky-smooth yet deep it was, with perfectly matched bass. An experience hard to match at home without individually amped drivers I expect, not to mention securing everything down and stopping rattles.
Do speakers clip because of too little power? My fronts clip at reference volume for the loudest scenes, they're only running off the reciever as my space is limited. |
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#2539 | |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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#2540 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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As for the extra height in the IMAX still, keep in mind that 1.66:1 is vertically larger than 1.78:1 but the actual photography was in 1.43:1. So, the stills can have any percentage of vertical information it chooses despite cutting off horizontal info. Also, I nevr implied vignetting was artificial, though it can be done. Last edited by Riddhi2011; 06-17-2017 at 08:43 PM. |
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