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#1081 |
Member
Nov 2014
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How are old movies available in 4K and new movies in 2K?
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#1083 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#1084 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I agree re: Star Wars. Fox AND Disney are part of the UHD Alliance so there are no issues with rights and all that bollocks. And I highly doubt that the new movies will be released on UHD BD because like so many modern films they'll be finished at 2K most likely (especially with 3D involved) as were the prequels, so all that leaves is the Original Trilogy which we know got a 16-bit (!) 4K remaster by Reliance in 2012. Look at the timing of it all; Ep VII is due in theaters around the time when UHD BD hardware will hopefully be hitting the stands, so when that movie hits home video a few months later UHD BD will have found its feet and releasing the original Star Wars in 4K will be one hell of a bold statement. Hell, make it a 'vault' title if you must (thinking of the Disney influence here) but just get it out there!
I know that the studios are normally slow on the uptake, wanting to make sure that a consumer base is in place before unleashing their biggest guns, but they can't afford to be that naive with UHD BD. It won't survive on the back of a dribble of modern day-and-date 4K releases and Adam Sandler movies (if/when Sony get into the game, natch), but if Fox were to have stuff like Star Wars, Titanic, the first two Alien movies and perhaps even the HD/UHD debuts of True Lies and The Abyss ready to go, you'd hear the squeals of fanboy delight echo all around the world. |
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Thanks given by: | HeavyHitter (01-08-2015) |
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#1085 |
Member
Dec 2014
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Old movies were shot on good old analog 35mm (and sometimes even 70mm) film. lots of detail in that to make a 4k transfer. newer movies were shot on digital film and are limited to the resolution that they were shot in.
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#1086 | |
Banned
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Being the cheap b@stards the studios are. |
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#1087 | |
Banned
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They would have to re-scan the negatives and remaster the visual effects, which is not something the studios, especially those that are financially hurting, would want to get involved with. Expect 2k upconverts for those too. For the time being anything that wasn't 100% film derived will mainly benefit from 10 bit, a higher color gamut, and wider dynamic range. Their resolution... not so much. Here's hoping the BBC has created new nature programming in true 4k. Should be a showcase for sure! Last edited by FilmFreakosaurus; 01-08-2015 at 12:48 AM. |
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#1088 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#1089 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#1091 |
Banned
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The head of the BDA (also an exec at Sony) talked briefly along the same lines as Panasonic. They're still saying the road map leads to the end of 2015 for discs and players. The final specs should be ironed out by mid year.
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#1092 |
Power Member
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Aaack, Here is the link I meant to post! Apologies.
http://www.hdtvtest.co.uk/news/uhd-bd-201501053979.htm Btw, Sony IS part of the UHD Alliance. |
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#1093 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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David, don’t you think THAT ^ part of your post is incomplete? Meaning, in fairness, elaboration for perspective is required….at least for those not following.
Follow-up question, who (what entity) has been contracted to do the actual integration work for Samsung’s UHD offerings? Hint: they have no division (no matter how small) which claims current membership in the UHD Alliance. |
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#1094 | |
Power Member
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Planet Earth was the first HD disc I purchased when I got my first 1080p TV in 2007 and has excellent picture quality. |
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#1095 |
Active Member
Feb 2008
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Quick question. If a movie is on a 50gb disc are the studios using nearly every last GB on that disc? How can you tell how many GB's a movie actually takes up?
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#1096 | |
Banned
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#1097 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Because when you shoot digitally, the information is stored on hard drives and not on film stock. Films are still being shot using film stock and hold the equivalent digital resolution of 4K plus (35mm), shooting digitally is different and you are limited to the resolution of which the camera can capture. The reason why older films get the 4K treatment is because new films are handled a lot better and thus a 2K scan is adequate, and the majority of CGI is produced at 2K resolution. That's not to say a new film wouldn't benefit from a 4K scan, because it would, but the cost in doing so has to be justifiable for them to process the film at 4K, which is becoming the norm. Currently 2K scanning is the norm. Studio's also like to scan at 4K for archival purposes, which tends to be older films, rather than new. |
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#1098 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#1099 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Shooting on film - even on IMAX - doesn't guarantee a 4K finish. Ghost Protocol and Star Trek Into Darkness are proof of that. Digital IMAX is 2K anyway AFAIK, so if there were more of them then people would be even less inclined to finish at 4K.
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#1100 |
Banned
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I was not saying film guarantees a 4K finish, but a film released in 2015 they would be crazy
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Tags |
4k blu-ray, ultra hd blu-ray |
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