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#6801 |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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#6803 | |
Banned
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![]() 3D is alive and well theatrically. HFR was never pushed as a standard. Compare the ratio to HDR (Dolby Vision) releases to HFR. Quote:
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#6804 |
Senior Member
Oct 2007
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I remember that advocates for 3D and HFR made the same argument about directors having to get with the current times. And while 3D is sticking around most directors don't shoot their movies in 3D and instead they make the movie in 2D and than pass it off to the studio who gets a company to do a 3D conversion. I think that HDR has a lot of promise but it is also very new. Dynamic metadata systems for HDR are being developed, Dolby Vision movie theaters are very rare, and the studios haven't announced any plans to add HDR to the DCI standard.
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#6806 | |
Banned
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#6807 | |
Power Member
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Thanks given by: | Wendell R. Breland (01-21-2016) |
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#6808 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Some parts will be 10x brighter based on that excerpt I was referencing. Something in the movie must go from 100 to 1000 nits surely? The information I'm reading here is telling me this extra brightness will result in more visual detail, reference Penton-Man's reply right with his example of visual acuity and dim tests versus brighter ones.
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#6809 | |
Power Member
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But we are not talking about the whole image going up in brightness, you can do that with the TVs that have been on the market for years now. Detail will go up because you don't have to clip in brighter areas of the image anymore as you have more dynamic range within them. So you can now show fine details that are surrounded by highlights. We noticed a lot of them in the Dolby Vision version of Man of Steel while at the Spectracal labs. |
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Thanks given by: | PeterTHX (01-21-2016) |
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#6810 | |
Banned
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#6811 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Kris what is your opinion on how the martian was rebuilt for 4k using the raw files? Good thing or same oled same ole? |
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#6812 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() Let’s just say for now that the perceived detail from display technology is not solely dependent upon a device's maximum luminance, as there are other contributing factors involved, e.g. compression of the shown content, pixel value in bits (bit depth), the inherent contrast ratio of the device, ambient lighting (mesopic vs. photopic vision), etc. |
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#6814 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() ![]() Dolby scientists have long made a point of differentiating diffuse white (scene reflective white) from highlights (specular reflections and emissive light sources that are greater than diffuse white) in a comprehensive report to the international community at least as far back as Oct. 2012 in this ~ 80 page document submitted to Working Party 6C ….https://www.itu.int/md/R12-WP6C-C-0077/en . And since that time, Dolby scientists have given several public presentations as well as publishing in several journals (SMPTE last year) reiterating the difference, but some in the consumer community as well as the journalistic blogger AV community seem to continue to equate speculars (thousand(s) nits with diffuse white (hundred nits). ![]() |
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#6815 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#6816 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Well to be more precise in this case, England. Mike, you live in England, right? Since that being the case, I was asking if you knew of one project which boasted an end-to-end production containing all imagery in the 4K realm. It’s just that I assumed you would be more familiar with what’s going on in your own country rather than any other country in the world, but perhaps no AV *journalists* ever did a write-up on that particular production
![]() Geoff, do you know what I’m referring to? Think David Attenborough. |
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#6819 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I think I see where the extra detail comes from. The 100 nit grading for Dolby Vision theaters is causing the bright areas to "clip". At home this "clipping" can be alleviated by using a grading with more capacity for higher nits allowing our eyes to see more of the fine details. Sounds great to me, but oh my how confusing the delivery of all this data is! Looking forward to seeing an example in my own home. Thanks again. |
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#6820 |
Special Member
Feb 2014
Los Angeles, CA
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I don't know what the nit level of my Vizio E-series is, but with the backlight at 60%, I think if the projector at my folks home on their 120 inch screen was that bright, I'd need sunglasses.
Trivial point being, the bigger the screen, the rougher on the eyes brightness gets, which is why there's somewhat of a happy marriage between 100 nits and a theatrical presentation. |
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