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#1901 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Meanwhile, it should be interesting to see how the upcoming classic A Passage to India sells. |
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#1902 |
Active Member
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I wonder if they prepped it for release because Spielberg directed it. After all, he came out saying his Universal movies weren't going to be HD-DVD exclusive. May it was moved up as a poke in the eye.
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#1903 | |
Super Moderator
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#1904 | |
Banned
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Obviously blockbusters like E.T., Jurassic Park, Star Wars, LotR, etc. will appeal to a larger number of people - but I imagine these are the ones where studios want to sell millions of discs right away. If both popular blockbusters AND the classics are off-limits for now, that really hurts Blu-ray's appeal to large groups of people. |
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#1905 | |
Active Member
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I know I'll buy Casablanca as soon as it comes out and there are a lot of other people like me. But, will it cross over, especially since the last DVD release was so exceptional? Not for huge sales, but I bet it will be consistent. Different media, but wasn't Bat Out of Hell on the Billboard catalog list at the top for 10+ years. No one week of sales was impressive, but over the long term, those numbers were remarkable. Also, I think there's a mindset among a lot of people that some of these older films don't benefit from HD. And, even if it does, many older films will always look old regardless of quality because of the stock used. |
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#1906 | |
Member
Sep 2007
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Those who know me quite well are aware of my position regarding the allocation of plenty bandwidth instead of barely enough...I guess nobody argues that "more bandwidth equals less quantization equals objectively better PQ in context with any given source". But the point is: Is the soft PQ because of the low bit rate or is the bit rate low because the source is soft? What needs to be understood is the following - Variable Bitrate encoding (like is used with any HDM release) is per definition a concept of CONSTANT QUALITY. To put it very simple - The compressionist sets a certain quantization parameter for any given release - this defines the relative quality in relation to the source - and the quantization level is directly linked to the available bandwidth budget and inherent characteristics of any given source (to put it very simple again: a highly detailed and dynamic source requires more bandwidth for any given quantization level than a more static one). So - A low bitrate as isolated parameter DOESN'T tell you anything about the "quality" of any given encoding. Ergo an inherently soft,static source (=a movie shot this way on purpose or just a bad/dated transfer or for whatever other reason) is encoded at a relatively low bitrate level. BUT it can still be encoded with very low quantization -> ergo it is very close to the quality of the source DESPITE the low bitrate. Such an transfer can objectively be even "better" (truer to the source) than something like DH4 or Becoming Jane - objectively meaning encoded with lower quantization. The argument often used is that "there are softer scenes/shots in some transfers and the bitrate is relatively low during those". The argument is something like due to bandwidth limitations those scenes are encoded at "less than optimal bitrates" and therefor the "PQ suffers" (something like low bitrate = heavy AVC/VC-1 deblocking loop filtering = lack of definition/softer/smoother picture)... Well - we are now were my post started - the basic principle of VBR encoding is constant quality - therefor any given scene of a encoding is (give or take) encoded at a similar level of transparency to the source. Therefor if a given transfer shows "great shots with outstanding definition and a very high applied bitrate (which comes quite naturally with these exceptional scenes) " they are encoded at a very similar quantization level than all the softer/"lacking" shots of an given transfer. This leads to the logic conclusion that: - these "softer/smoother/less detailed" scenes are much easier to encode and therefor less bitrate is necessary than with more "difficult scenes". Although both these extremes show the same relative quality to the source. - therefor the next logic conclusion is that bitrate limitation/starvation shows itself during scenes that are the "toughest to encode" and certainly NOT during easy shots (eg. out of focus, static,...). They don't look "nice" because they are shot this way and/or the transfer itself isn't very good - in both cases the source is to be blamed and NOT the encoding and therefor certainly NOT the low bitrate -> which is - following the VBR concept - just a consequence of the input. In short: Looking at the isolated parameter of "applied bitrate per shot/scene/movie" DOES NOT conclusively tell you ANYTHING about the quality of any given encoding! It can just serve as a hint about the level of quantization among other factors. To put it another way - Across the Universe looks pretty decent IMHO - "tack sharp" it is not nor is it "intended to be" (keyword: diffuse lightning) - BUT encoding at much higher bitrates (like 35mbps ABR) wouldBitrates certainly not change this attribute in any observable manner. btw I am looking very much forward to the upcoming BD of A Passage to India and I sincerely hope it will be profitable enough for SPHE to warrant other future releases of such true classics. Last edited by TheLion; 03-20-2008 at 12:32 AM. |
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#1907 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#1908 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#1909 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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P.S.
I’ve asked the Huntster to make an appearance and answer some peoples’ questions regarding Uni and Paramount, etc. - so keep an eye out for the Bitsy dude possibly this evening or the next day or so. It appears he’s been busy of late, possibly trying to find his house? as I think he lives in the quintessential *planned community* where everything pretty much looks like everything else. |
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#1911 |
Junior Member
Aug 2007
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#1912 | |
Junior Member
Aug 2007
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#1913 | |
Expert Member
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#1914 |
Super Moderator
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The film is one of the few "classic" gems that Sony owns. Yes, any serious collector will need to have this movie. However, it makes financial sense to wait for it's BD release. Just look at how poorly the HD DVD (obviously an inferior format with much less support) versions of Casablanca, Robin Hood, and Spartacus performed.
Last edited by Blu Titan; 03-20-2008 at 02:01 AM. |
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#1915 | |
Active Member
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But Penton, do you think studios are getting gunshy with the state of the economy? Because I could see execs worrying about the state of discretionary spending. |
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#1916 | |
Expert Member
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Hopefully if there is something keeping Sony from hitting the very top level of PQ they will figure it out. |
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#1917 | |
Moderator
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But, I sometimes sense I'm surrounded with people ready to scream "enough with this old crap, give me Star Wars!" (sigh) |
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#1918 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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You would not believe how many variations of "I'd buy a copy and so would all my friends (who are the entire existing fanbase of said property)" I've seen over the years There simply aren't enough classic film lovers with decks yet. In a few years there will be. IN the meantime, buy PTI to show them that the Lean lovers are in full force, and buy River Kwai when it hits (hopefully still later this year) |
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#1919 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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The LoA DVD looks pretty good and I believe the film itself has gone through some extensive restorative processes over the years so I can only imagine the BD will look amazing. But speaking of River Kwai, or even Guns of Navarone, the DVDs have never been impressive. Do you know if this is due to the source or bad transfers to DVD? And how do you think these will translate onto BD? |
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