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#4481 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#4482 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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And along those lines of viewer comfort and quality of HDR presentation, independent (no commercial incentive or reward) research facilities testing viewers watching HDR content at up to only 30 and 50 min. evaluation time ( I say "only" because imagine watching 2-3 hrs. worth of a feature film) have been met with complaints from test subjects that the backlighting was either too low or too high. The ideal or even satisfactory ambient lighting for new HDR tvs displaying brightness with HDR content mapping be it at either 1000, 800, 600, whatever nits, and also relating that to the size of the display itself, has to solved for everyone’s benefit. |
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#4483 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Gotta go, BIG football watching (American) weekend.
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#4484 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Penton - when you're back, natch - what do you think will be the absolute minimum amount of nits that'll qualify as an HDR presentation? If they decide on 1000 nits as the standard, then I should imagine that there won't be too many variances (mapped via metadata or whatever) below that. Obviously you'd need a conventional Rec. 709 grade (I hope
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#4485 |
Banned
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#4486 | |
Banned
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If hdr can make the wizard of Oz look closer to what was shot then I am all for it. But this worrying trend of dating a master by its colour temp and grading is painful. In the 90's and 2000's we lived with pink and now it's teal, what's next? Last edited by dvdmike; 01-10-2015 at 09:04 PM. |
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#4487 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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But it's not so much a 'working trend' as 'it's how it's always been', i.e. the look of movies on home video has ALWAYS been at the mercy of whatever technical restrictions (at either the mastering or playback end) are present and/or whichever grading style is the flavour of the month.
It's all well and good taking a stand against it, but unless you've got a 35mm projector and prints of your favourite films handy (Tarantino, put your hand down at the back there) then you're never gonna get that 1:1 level of exactitude, and seeing how astonishingly good certain remastered movies have looked on Blu-ray I'll take that version every day of the week and twice on Sundays. If the director has signed off on it, so much the better (brain farts like Friedkin's first stab at The French Connection excepted, natch, but at least the silly sod corrected it). Yeah, there are "teams" of people out there taking old prints and transferring them to video and cleaning them up, but even then the contrast and densities are all wrong. Prints aren't used for conventional transfers (unless as an absolute last resort) because they're specifically designed to have light blasted through them onto a 20/30/40ft screen, and so their properties don't translate across to video at all well IMO. |
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#4488 | |
Banned
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I get that prints are not ideal, but the groups do not have access to an IP! (I wish we did) Sony and now Arrow are prime examples of how to master respectfully of the original film elements. The French Connection is a perfect example, a beautiful master respectfully done then ruined totally. Look at Withnail, no new colour grading, no changes just beautiful film like analogue feeling work. |
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#4489 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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worrying trend, working trend, my comments still apply: film to video transfer has *always* been subject to various conditions, and it's only in the last 20 years that the tech has overtaken celluloid (4/35 anyway) in terms of sheer resolving power, with only a wider-spread 'democratisation' of that process happening in the last 10 years or so.
In a funny way perhaps it's a good thing that we've had all these tech improvements and all these various colour differences etc for x movie down the years, because you can only learn by doing and as video is getting nearer to approximating what film can do, the more that people should be at pains to make sure that what we're seeing really *is* indicative of the filmmaker's intent. We're not there yet though, obviously! ![]() |
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#4490 | |
Banned
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (01-10-2015) |
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#4491 | |
Senior Member
Oct 2007
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#4492 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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If there ever is such an official standard negotiated amongst all those with vested interests…as to a minimum, I would say that it would come in near the luminance (100% white signal input) of the least bright 4K OLEDs LG will carry in their consumer line. |
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#4493 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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P.S. For those who don’t know, or totally understand, what a ‘nit’ is, I refer y’all to my young niece, who is an official spokesperson on the topic with an expert, distinguished career made known to me by her about a year ago....https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...gs#post8764829 |
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#4494 | |
Banned
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#4495 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#4496 | |
Banned
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#4498 |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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The brightness standard with HDR does worry me. As is, most reviewers and calibrators are turning the backlight of LCD's down 45-65%. Even at 35% I still need decent ambient light to not fatigue my eyes with my Vizio set.
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#4499 |
Banned
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#4500 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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There ya go again being too judgmental, Peter! On the plus or half glass full side, speaking as an owner of both 4K tv brands, one could argue that with the Viz, owners are getting more for their money. For not only are they getting a supposedly inanimate device, but with Vizio’s implementation of full-array backlighting with local dimming, an owner/user is getting something that is kind of alive as it appears to breath…. https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...c#post10089063
Sooooo, one need not go out and get a cat, dog, parrot etc. as another living companion. The Viz is a multi-purpose entity. My wife and I have a living creature down there in our San Diego place which is better than a plant because it talks and we don't have to worry at all about feeding it, walking it, or having it rip up our furniture when we're up here in the LA/OC county environs. ![]() |
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