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#61 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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My mind works in mysterious ways….part of your handle (GOAL) prompted me to look at your location….France, which reminded me of Paris….which reminded me of a certain flick in the past…which reminded me that it was exhibited at the lab chosen back in the day as the facility to test D-Cinema spec/technology…..which reminded me that the flick was mastered in 4K (back in ’06)….which reminded me I had forgotten all about it.
I posted the result of those synaptic connections in the language of love as a thank you to our French-speaking readers with a link to the pertinent pdf in the 2nd paragraph here….https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...is#post8714645 |
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#62 |
Senior Member
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If I'd have a 4K TV and the films are really 4K quality then here are some:
All Stanley Kubrick's films All Quentin Tarantino's films All Christopher Nolan's films (can't wait to see TDK and TDKR IMAX scenes in 4K!!!) All Martin Scorsese films All David Fincher films All Coen Brothers films All Alfred Hitchcock films Lots of James Cameron films Lots of Ridley Scott films Pretty much all Steven Spielberg films Pretty much all Danny Boyle films Some Clint Eastwood films Snyder films: Watchmen, 300, Man of Steel (yeah I said it) PIXAR films Disney's classic (Beauty and the Beast, Lion King, etc.) The Godfather Part I & II LOTR, Hobbit The REAL original Star Wars trilogy (i.e. no digital work, I want the real negatives to get the 4K treatment dammit!) Ben-Hur Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy likely Shawshank Redemption The Matrix The Deer Hunter One flew over the Cuckoo's Nest The Silence of the Lambs (can't wait to watch it in real good quality for once) James Bond films: Dr. No, From Russia with Love, Goldfinger, Casino Royale, Skyfall for instance Dollars Trilogy Once upon a time in the West Bourne trilogy Harry Potter saga X-Men, X2, XMFC Apocalypse Now Heat Gravity The Exorcist Predator Man on Fire Braveheart Apocalypto Abre los Ojos Karakter Prisoners Dances with Wolves Dracula (Francis Ford Coppola) The Tree of Life Kramer vs Kramer The Cell, The Fall IMAX mentions (because IMAX): Catching Fire, MI: Ghost Protocol, Star Trek into darkness, Hubble TV series: or, who I'd watch again in 4K: The Sopranos Game of Thrones Six Feet Under Dexter (S1/S2/S3/S4) Heroes S1 Rome True Blood (at least S1) Sitcoms: Friends, Seinfeld (though, might not watch everything again, quite much ![]() Docu: Planet Earth (**** yeah, that'd be amazing!) Then again… These are A LOT of films to have in 4K… Probably won't collect them all but I desire to see them in 4K. |
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Thanks given by: | flyry (09-17-2017) |
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#66 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Most every Blu-ray title that I purchased was an upgrade over the DVD counter part. Always exceptions but none were the fault of the BD format. |
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#67 | |
Senior Member
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#68 |
Expert Member
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Well, my favorite movies aren't that particularly visually striking so I won't be getting movies I already own on Blu-ray to 4K. Requiem for a Dream does have some beautiful cinematography but I wasn't that impressed with it's Blu transfer. Fight Club, and other favorites definitely don't see upgrading. The 4K's I do buy will movies I don't own already.
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#69 | |
Blu-ray King
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#72 |
Blu-ray Guru
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A LOT of the films listed here can't be in true 4K without having all the visual effects, color timing, etc. redone completely (which is not likely to happen). Since the fairly early 2000s pretty much all major productions have gone through a digital intermediate stage where the film was scanned into a computerized system for editing/color correction/effects and the like, and then printed back onto film for distribution to theatres. Until very recently this was never done at 4K... and it still usually isn't, though it's gaining traction. The norm is 2K, and further back than a year or two ago pretty much EVERYTHING was done on a 2K intermediate. Unless you wanted to view the unprocessed film footage, 2K is the max resolution you're going to get out of these movies without going back to the original elements and redoing everything. Even some recent blockbusters like The Hobbit movies are mastered in 2K.
And of course, that doesn't even touch on the great number of movies that were shot, fully or partially, in digital 2K or 1080p in the first place and can simply never go higher without upscaling... Honestly, that's one of the main reasons I'm not terribly excited for 4K just yet. Pre-digital intermediate films can be rescanned in 4K, which is great, and we're now moving towards native 4K mastering for more films, but there's about a decade worth of movies that just cannot be in 4K. |
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#73 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Yeah, it's kinda funny that, in this big push for 4K, someone forgot to tell the movie studios about it when it comes to making new flicks. Heck, maybe they did, but the studios just don't give a shit because 4K costs a lot more money.
Perhaps when there is a tangible presence of 4K media in the home (Sony's puck doesn't count) the studios will look more towards that end product and we'll see more 4K finishes, but for now it's the exception, not the norm. |
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#74 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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…http://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/...nts-men-n23306 |
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#75 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Plus, given time, DPs will refine their skills with various camera/lens combinations…http://www.theasc.com/asc_blog/paral...r-perceptions/ |
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#76 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#77 |
Power Member
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I have spent more money on Blurays then I did on DVDs. I think with 4K I will be extremely choosy. New movies with excellent transfers I probably would not upgrade to 4K. But a movie like Scarface could definitely benefit from a 4K transfer and I would buy it even though I spent 25 dollars on the Bluray. Movies that have extremely high replay value like Scarface would be great to have in 4K. I own the single releases of Breaking Bad on Blu and those would be very tempting to own in 4K even though they already have good picture.
However I will be waiting however long it takes for 4K TV's and players to become affordable to the general public. I am satisfied with bluray for now. |
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#79 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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![]() They'll get there eventually I'm sure, but for now we're still seeing most new shows finished in 2K rather than 4K (Sony aside, natch), adding to that ever-growing list of 'people's favourite movies to upgrade to 4K which aren't actually 4K'. |
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#80 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Don’t get me wrong. You are correct, despite being shot with 4K (or higher rez cameras)….or shot on celluloid, a major cause for the continued paucity of 4K finishing remains the additional cost charged to clients which still typically runs about 2x or more than that for a 2K finish for the typical feature motion picture that Hollywood studios churn out these days. Point I was making is that you have to start somewhere in order for the high-rez DI workflow to become commonplace and at least we’ve started….and there has been progress (more efficient codecs, lower storage costs, etc.) It’s a process. |
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