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#5461 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Moderator question “How important to you are high-dynamic-range technologies, which allow audiences to see blacker blacks and whiter whites?” Deakins…”It's also about personality, isn't it? I mean, each one of you, I can watch your work and know it's you. It's about the eye behind the camera. It's not about the bloody technology (bolding mine); it's about the person behind it.”…. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/new...akins-5-751367 I think most cinephiles don’t care if they watch a film and automatically recognize from the get-go by looking at it that it was shot by Deakins, Beebe or Chivo (whose personal *style* in The Revenant Roger commented about here….https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Ahh...utu.be&t=3m28s Maybe I’m getting entirely the wrong vibe, but I get the feeling that Roger is reluctant (unless prodded) to use capture resolution beyond ALEXA XT (or film acquisition DI-ed at 4K) or high dynamic range finishing because it doesn’t fit with his long established style. I think that a cinematographer can shoot at higher spatial rez and greater dynamic range and still get some/more value out it in terms of further immersing the audience into the story, beyond that of his traditional methods. |
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#5462 | |
Banned
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Viper, so 1080p but a better visual camera than most of the higher resolution ones |
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#5463 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() Heck, occasionally I notice some posters persist in the 4K Hobbit myth. |
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#5464 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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One might not appreciate it unless one were to do butterfly splits of the final outcome of lower vs. higher K’ed cameras in the post house, but a more K’ed sensor camera allows for greater flexibility which helps “get the most appealing images through color science and resolution.” Read the comments by the postproduction sup and Jeff Cronenweth here…. https://www.theasc.com/ac_magazine/N...Girl/page1.php |
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#5465 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Oh, I've never said it ain't great to have moar numberz *in general* as a starting point for any project (although the abilities of the digital camera itself outside of straight res always come in to play), but when it comes to them numbers on UHD Blu-ray *specifically* I think some peoples need to chill until we've sampled the goods, be it a straight 2K upscale, 2.8K acquisition for a 4K finish, film/RED 4K finish with 2K VFX, 4K rebuild with 2K VFX etc etc.
Peoples could well say "why don't you shut up and wait then?" about my tiresome HDR to SDR comments that I come up with every day and that's fair enough, but seeing as how sub-4K material has been part of most 4K finishes up until this juncture [edit: with seemingly little complaint from theatrical audiences] I think people are making mountains out of molehills, whereas HDR to SDR conversion is still a mostly undocumented process in the techbloggersphere and it's making me mighty nervous (especially seeing as we can't all go out and buy a new TV right now ![]() Last edited by Geoff D; 01-30-2016 at 07:34 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | StingingVelvet (01-30-2016) |
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#5466 | |
Banned
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More so for the films (if they make some) that were shot in native HDR and not timed afterwards. |
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#5467 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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P.S. I agree with and enjoy your perspective….your posts are often worthy of supplementation, ergo, I just wanted to say something positive about higher rez. Excuse now while I kick back to watch. |
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#5469 | |
Active Member
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I'll take that UHD BD any day over the 1080P BD. |
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Thanks given by: | ray0414 (01-30-2016), reanimator (01-31-2016) |
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#5470 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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The upscaling will be "much, much better", eh? I can't wait to put that to the test, seeing as the upscaling is exceptional on my set. And "higher bitrate" would actually mean something if we were talking about the same compression codec as Blu-ray. But we're not, so such comparisons are meaningless.
WCG and HDR will be the real x factors when comparing a pro 2K -> UHD upscale to the regular Blu, and seeing as I can't use either of those things on my 4K TV I'll be in a better position than most to see if the upscaling in and of itself is "much, much better". |
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#5471 | ||
Blu-ray Prince
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#5472 | |
Banned
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They looked a heck of a lot better than what my TV or Oppo can do with the DVDs. There's merit in believing material upscaled directly from the source files, rather than a compressed final product. |
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#5473 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Hell, I've already said that I've seen more detail on a UHD upscale versus the Blu equivalent, but was it "much, much better"? That's a negatory. Last edited by Geoff D; 01-30-2016 at 11:55 PM. |
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#5474 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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^ And more to the point, is that slight increase in detail for upscaled stuff - given that there's no HDR/WCG at casa di Geoff - worth buying an entirely new player and software for (and getting a potentially botched SDR regrade into the bargain)? HECK no, which is why I'm hoping that 4K rebuilds are more common than not (and
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#5475 | |
Active Member
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Not sure why you would want to use the same H.264 encoding as BD for UHD. The UHD BD will use HEVC encoding. If you have seen some of the streaming HEVC content from Amazon and Netflix you can see how good it can look at such a low bitrates of around 16Mb/s. But the UHD BD will have bitrates many times higher. Which makes me excited for how good it can look. And things are so inexpensive now. I remember paying $1k for a launch BD player in 2006 to use with my 2005 1080P Sammy DLP set that I payed close to $4K for ![]() |
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#5476 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I've seen a "high powered" upscale compared to the regular "real time" Blu-ray and there was an improvement to the former to be sure...but "much, much better"? Nein, no, non, nah, nuh-huh, nope.
Oh, HEVC is "high bitrate" compared to the compressed-to-hell video streams, why didn't you say so? But my point is that we don't yet know what the optimal performance of HEVC will be for these commercial discs so calling them "high bitrate" in and of themselves is meaningless. |
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#5477 |
Banned
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Except the Simpsons upscales were from when they started digitally transferring and coloring them, so they were not "tatty old".
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#5478 | |
Active Member
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![]() Hopefully we get to check out these UHD titles soon. I know I am looking forward to it. |
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#5479 | |
Banned
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#5480 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Tags |
4k blu-ray, ultra hd blu-ray |
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