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#8161 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Post from April 21st…..
Quote:
Thank you. |
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#8162 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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For those who missed the Café Society happenings at Cine Gear 2016, Carolyn
![]() the same double duty weekend as also serving as a moderator for a panel at a Producers conference on the Sony Pictures Studios lot……http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/beh...y-urges-899766 |
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#8163 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#8164 |
Banned
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Something for the folks who think HDR is all about "exaggerated brightness" and older films cannot benefit.
https://pro.sony.com/bbsccms/assets/..._explained.pdf As you can see, HDR can mean DARKER. |
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#8165 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() Some minor updates/additions to the article which were posted last year….https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...s#post10485983. Plus, for the record, the info with regards to film scanning (in the hyperlink) was posted well before publication of the CineAlta magazine article. |
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#8166 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() And I assume also making a point of the color science within one minute’s time in the recent testimonial which was posted after the camera’s reveal at the Clubhouse and later Cine Gear….. https://vimeo.com/169289501 |
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#8167 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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For folks willing to sacrifice perhaps a wee bit on quality, but personally prefer/demand watching their HDR content with much more surround lighting than that exercised by typical home theater enthusiasts, HLG will serve as a good alternative for sports, concerts, etc. and parental viewers having to keep one eye on little children playing in the same room.
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#8168 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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dvdmike, heed the warning…..http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/beh...l-tools-899964
and what one can easily add to this sentence in the article - “other members of a production beyond the cinematographer now have the ability to manipulate the images the cinematographer creates”…….especially after the cinematographer is dead and buried in the ground. |
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#8169 | ||
Banned
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Quote:
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (06-07-2016) |
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#8170 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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We won’t go there.
Although, several years ago, at least one cinematographer/Director (still active in the industry) had the foresight to clearly express his wishes after the feature film was finished and in the can so that nobody from a studio would ever mess with (or what’s the popular word now, 're-imagine'?) his original work, despite advances in technology….last paragraph in red here. |
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#8171 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Throwback Thursday post (by mike)
So, mike, I imagine you still feel the same ^ as you did ~ 1½ years ago. Scrolling down 3 posts, in retrospect, I know my view regarding active filmmaker participation in the grading suite with HDR remasters for Ultra HD Blu-rays hasn’t changed. It’s kind of funny that not so long ago there was sooo much studio marketing (and thusly reviewer attention) and consumer discussion afforded to whether or not the color grading for new 4K restorations leading to new Blu-ray movie versions was Director (or cinematographer) supervised, or at least ‘approved’…..and yet now with HDR grades to produce the new Ultra HD Blu-ray iterations, no such similar order of attention is being expressed regarding filmmaker involvement to authenticate the HDR product with the filmmaker’s artistic intent. Does this mean digital colorists in regards to a greater dynamic range and color volume are better mind readers of Directors (or cinematographers) than they were with a simple bump up in spatial resolution brought about by a 4K restoration leading to a regrade? |
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#8172 | |
Banned
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#8173 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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If it can be applied with prudence and taste - dat oh so crucial taste - and with filmmaker involvement then fine. If the filmmakers aren't around any more then we're still at the mercy of Mr Colourist's whims and fancies, just as we are with any number of recent new transfers, where we know not from whence they came. |
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#8174 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Well that was too easy for you. You mean you don’t have money burning a hole in your pocket for the newest software? Then tell me this mike, could they entice you into buying an HDR version of Mad Max (1979), if instead it being HDR graded by colorist only (or God help us, an editor
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#8175 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Grading in HDR is a whole new (gigantic) ball of wax. How much do you ‘re-imagine’ the original look to offer more eye candy to the HDR version but still remain *true* to the original look? That’s completely subjective without active input from the filmmaker as to his creative intent and an order of magnitude different than a re-grade for a 4K restore. It’s ok if a studio wants to sell more product, be it physical media or OTT with streaming and consumers like what they get with the new iteration ![]() my point is that given all the attention/publicity in the past as to Director (or Cinematographer) supervised 4K restorations for home media deliverables and essentially none now with the MUCH more visually powerful tool of high dynamic range (even if you conservatively re-grade in HDR)…..smacks of studio and reviewer hypocrisy. |
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#8176 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#8177 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#8178 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I'm not saying HDR doesn't have the potential to do murder to x film's original intent - of course it does - but then so does everything else at a colourist's fingertips. Just look at the shit that L'Immagine Ritrovita keep putting out, brown/yellow coloured movies with horribly low gamma time after time after time. If they're supposed to be the damned experts then I'll take my chances with Mr R.L. Colourist. |
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#8179 | |
Banned
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#8180 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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![]() Or are there different and even worse levels of wrong when it comes to respecting the original intent where HDR is concerned? If that's the case then that's fair enough, but AFAIC Pandora's Box was opened as soon as them ones and zeroes went mainstream. Like I said, that doesn't make it right but neither do I assume that every single Blu-ray ever made has the designated intent translated 100%, either by the limitations of SDR 709 video or because it was graded by Colin the Tea Boy. Last edited by Geoff D; 06-10-2016 at 10:09 PM. |
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