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#1601 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Agreed. It's not 15-perf 65mm but then what is? Perhaps ARRI should work on stitching three of their '5-perf' A65 sensors together and rotating them 90 degrees, then we'd get something approaching what true IMAX can do in the digital realm
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#1602 | |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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#1603 | ||
Blu-ray Knight
Feb 2012
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Maybe entering into some kind of agreement with IMAX, as well as composing or at least protecting for the 1.9 ratio is what they will use to determine "shot in IMAX" status |
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#1604 | ||
Senior Member
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But I did catch Sully last night at the first screening in IMAX (which had more people attending than the screening of the Secret Lives of Pets I watched in IMAX during the afternoon which was like "MoviesVille, Population: Me"), and I did like the IMAX countdown, which started like a regular IMAX countdown, but when it said "Filmed With IMAX Cameras", the screen opened up, which was a nice touch. By the way, there was an IMAX preview of Inferno at the screening of Sully, which the screen was opened up, which now makes me want to see it badly. Very, very badly. |
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#1605 |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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Guys, the Alexa 65 has become a normalized camera option on premiere productions. Eastwood didn't need to be "convinced" by it; it's not like Sully was his move to digital- his last two films were both shot on the standard Alexa. It's become common place for a couple years now for productions that intend to present the finished product in 2.40 to shoot spherically in 1.85 so that they A.) have reframing options, and B.) can expand the ratio for premium showings such as IMAX. James Gunn just finished shooting the next Guardians on the Red Epic 8K camera, and he's said multiple times that it will have expanding ratios in IMAX. It won't get a "shot in IMAX" logo though, since they didn't strike a deal with the company Red. It's marketing, nothing more.
I stress this point because "shot in IMAX" has always been a technical specification, not just a marketing ploy. This isn't the case with Sully or anything shot with the Alexa 65 that's branded differently. It's smoke and mirrors. |
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Thanks given by: | GLaDOS (09-10-2016), Movieman66 (09-09-2016) |
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#1606 | |
Active Member
Sep 2013
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As for the movie, it was good. Picture looked great too. |
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#1607 |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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There's no such thing as an "IMAX lens". Nolan uses an assortment of customized glass, most of which is Hasselblad based. The Alexa IMAX system uses standard Arri 65 lenses, none of which are exclusive to IMAX.
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#1608 |
Blu-ray Knight
Feb 2012
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http://www.indiewire.com/2016/09/sul...65-1201724515/
This article has more info about the Alexa IMAX camera and it's use on Sully. The only difference between the Alexa IMAX and regular Alexa 65 is software adjustments designed for IMAX's color space and workflow, and the only things not shot with the camera were shots in flight simulators where the space was too small to accommodate the cameras. |
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#1610 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#1611 |
Banned
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#1613 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I was looking at the IMAX portions of 'Captain America: Civil War' and those not only came nowhere near the depth and clarity and grit of a 15 perf IMAX shot film, they also looked quite dull and flat, when watching in 2D. It's not just the shallow depth of field, there's something, Idk, inherently flat about digital images and digital grading almost always feel fake to me. Maybe most are fine with it and don't care. But it bugs me. Digital grading on 35mm film doesn't always look good either. 'Spectre' was one of the worst examples of that. The colours were dull and robbed the richness of film. The opening 'Day of the Dead' sequence is horrible. A bland yellow overlay, with no shades, virtually no colour separation. This was the case throughout the film. However, 'Casino Royale' was also digitally graded and it looks stunning. I guess, back then the tools were limited and they still had the old school photochemical mindset. Now, most of the time, things feel too polished and tacked on. Jurassic World's grading went the other road. Shot on Super 35 and Super 70, its digital grading feels very fake, cartoonish at times. They tried to match the richness of the photochemically timed earlier films but the colours don't feel like they belong to the objects/characters organically. It's wonderful that in these age and times there are still those who use photochemical timing, like Mr. Nolan and Paul Thomas Anderson. Last edited by Riddhi2011; 09-18-2016 at 04:46 AM. |
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#1614 |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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It's widely noted that there was an "era" in the mid-2000s, where the digital intermediate was just being adopted, that a number of blockbuster films went way overboard with color grading. A lot of Spielberg's work (War of the Worlds and Minority Report perhaps most egregiously), a number of the post-Columbus Harry Potter's, anything Michael Bay (although he's always been color grade centric, just now with a sharper tool), Snyder's first two outings, the third Mission: Impossible, and the beginning of Eastwood's more desaturated palette. This has evened out, though. We don't often see crazy filters overlaying entire films like they were selected from Instagram like we used to.
Casino Royale is an odd example, too. It's color grade is much the same as Jurassic World's. Boosted saturation and blacks leaning on the crushed side. There's certainly nothing "purely" filmic about the color approach to Royale. Last note: the digital versions of all movies are color graded digitally. Nolan's films aren't graded photochemically and then scanned 1:1, they need to be regraded using the film image on one side of the screen and the digital on the other to match the intended look as much as possible. Outside of seeing his movies on film, they're still put through a DI. |
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#1615 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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^ I agree about Casino Royale, it's not got that kind of flat, desaturated look that's so popular at the moment but is very vibrant and contrasty when it wants to be. Said 'flat' look is indeed most likely a response to the wildly overzealous grading that the DI was first used for, Charlie's Angels 2 is another that springs to mind for how cartoony it looks.
I liked what Spielbergo originally did with Minority Report though, the theatrical experience was like bleach bypass turned up to 11, whereas the new 6K transfer they did for Blu-ray (it wasn't originally finished on a DI) made it look a bit more normal, funnily enough. (Same with SPR) |
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#1616 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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"The digital presentation of INTERSTELLAR has been created from 4 and 8k scans of the photochemically- color graded film elements, fine-tuned in the digital realm to maximize the color and contrast attributes of digital projectors, and dust-busted to achieve the cleanest and most stable image presentation possible. The film was mastered in 4k for the highest digital resolution currently available." (http://www.film-tech.com/ubb/f14/t000264.html) And this is from The ASC: "6K Imax digital blowups from a 35mm anamorphic IP" and this- "FotoKem also created the 2.40:1 flat 4K DCPs from 6K/4K over-scans of the color-timed 35mm IP." What I take from these words is that the digital versions WERE scans of the photochemical Interpositives, only fine tuned digitally for digital projectors. That's it. They did not regrade the negative digitally, like they did with Jurassic Park 3D, Raiders of the Lost Ark IMAX version or Titanic 3D. |
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#1617 | |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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A digital scan of a film cell doesn't look the same as that same cell being projected onto a screen, and the former is the image the filmmaker's are using to make color and contrast decisions. They scan the graded IP and then use digital tools to make it match the original look. This is still, literally, digital color grading. They aren't going back to the original IP (they should, it would give them better image quality), but they're still using digital tools to varying extremes based on how far off each scan of each shot is from the look of the projected image. I can't find it for the life of me, but Nolan might've even spent more time on the digital version than the film one; he was extremely picky about it matching. |
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#1618 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | Spike M. (09-18-2016) |
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#1619 |
Blu-ray Prince
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I saw 'Sully' (finally) yesterday at it's last showing at the Lockheed Martin theater - and one thing that struck me is the close ups looked so sharp and crisp. However the best and startling surprise was how much overhead sound effects there were - finally a 12-channel mix that wasn't too front heavy sounding.
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#1620 |
Blu-ray Knight
Feb 2012
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http://www.ew.com/article/2016/09/27...alflow_twitter
It's not getting shot with IMAX camera status (unless something changes) but Doctor Strange will have more than an hour of specially formatted IMAX sequences according to its director (probably similar to Guardians of the Galaxy). There also will be a free 15 minute preview of the film in IMAX 3D on October 10th. |
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