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#5761 | ||
Senior Member
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Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (06-29-2018) |
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#5762 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#5763 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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^
Stephen just became a new member of the Academy….http://www.app.oscars.org/newmembers2018/ Anyone know/have balls to guess how much the very top colorists in town (their facilities commercial rate, that is) charge per hour to color grade a feature film? It’s a little flexible/negotiable, but ballpark – a. $200./hr. b. $400./hr. c. $600./hr. d. $800./hr. e. $1000./hr. f. >$1000./hr. |
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#5765 | |
Senior Member
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So perhaps around 400-600 hours? (if one person is working on it?) Maybe around $50K per film, so ~$1,000/hr? I could be way off here. Last edited by alexanderg823; 06-29-2018 at 06:55 PM. |
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#5766 | |
Special Member
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#5751 :: specifically :: 'So, in theory, adding HDR to 2001 for the UHD release is essentially artificially boosting of the colors, yes?'
no :: in original film capture the color/contrast/resolution was beyond even UHD (as it currently is implemented) :: so, in SDR/SD/etc and SDR/HD/etc, what was 'originally available/captured' was compressed/compromised as our previous formats were comparatively 'extremely limited' :: with, the current UHD/HDR (Dolby Vision)/etc standards, simply for the first time, we are able to further 'approximate' what was 'originally captured/intended' so :: picture quality in UHD/HDR (currently) is simply an improved capability/format that allows for going back to the original content quality and presenting a more faithful reproduction via UHD of what was 'originally captured/intended' if the technology were available then note :: there are other issues at play here, that i expect many will bring up, but this is the basics of it, and is accurate, and hopefully simple and to the point note :: you should be realizing and improved viewing experience on you HD display, when viewing an UHD content on an UHD player; this is due basically (more controversy?) that the picture quality/elements are superior and translate to even your limited (comparatively) HD display viewing (yes :: it does get quite a bit better with 'viewed more completely' on an UHD/HDR/Dolby Vision display) note :: HDR (specifically) - previous content :: no, using terminlogy as is currently in use "(HDR) was not a piece of the technoloy back then" :: more clearly though, the 'original dynamice range' was captured, simply due to content standards until now, unable to be utilized/translated, that now, with the capabilty of UHD/HDR (Dolby Vision) what was 'orignally captured/intended' is for the first time available (via UHD/Blu-ray) note :: production workflow :: yes, using current production workflow (UHD/etc) applies to current film capture/production; again though, this applies equally to any film in any era of the past - equally (unfortunately though, the primary issue is the current condition of the original content given the realities of how well taken care of - the original - throughout the years by the studio while in storage, etc.) Quote:
Last edited by jibucha; 06-29-2018 at 08:13 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | mrtickleuk (06-30-2018) |
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#5767 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#5768 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#5769 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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You are not.
![]() Survey says…..f. > $1,000/hr. Although not expressly revealed as such ^ in the HPA webinar, a feature (f.) which especially should not go unheeded by those who may be reading this thread and considering career choices, namely the YEPs – |
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Thanks given by: | DanBa (06-30-2018), mrtickleuk (06-30-2018) |
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#5770 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Wabo, the cicerones have shown up here - https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...r#post15229932
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#5771 | ||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Andrey’s, who I mentioned previously on this thread in the past regarding a completely different matter/content - Quote:
P.S. Anne (from Netflix), maraming salamat ![]() |
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#5772 |
Senior Member
Sep 2010
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A good start of the year for UHD HDR
https://blog.harmonicinc.com/good-start-year-uhd-hdr/ "On the technology side, the HDR battle has not ceased, despite both the Ultra HD Forum and the DVB standards committee selecting PQ10 [aka HDR10] and HLG back in 2016. Those HDR specifications are either without metadata (i.e., HLG) or with static metadata (i.e., PQ10). The industry has moved onto the deployment stage for both HDR specifications. The ATSC 3.0 committee has now standardized A/3421 in addition to PQ10 and HLG, along with the dynamic metadata-based HDR specification Dolby Vision from Dolby and SL-HDR1 from Technicolor. DVB has opened new commercial requirements to cover the existing specification of UHD-1 Phase 2, and the Ultra HD Forum has integrated those new HDR schemes in the Phase B Guidelines published this past April. In the enhanced version of the Ultra HD Forum Guidelines, new technologies appear, such as • Next-generation HDR with dynamic metadata support (Dolby Vision and SL-HDR1) • Object-based coding for next-generation audio • High frame rate for 1080p100/120 sports content • Content-aware encoding to bring the bitrate to more practical values for OTT deployments of UHD HDR." ![]() |
Thanks given by: | gkolb (07-01-2018), Robert Zohn (06-30-2018) |
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#5773 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#5774 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#5775 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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especially for folks in my neck of the woods, like me, who can now rent on the cheap some Ultra HD Blu-rays, pointed out by my USA bicycle glove (held to the screen by a fellow rider of today's group on the way home to choose one)….
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#5776 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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I’ve pretty much deleted from my grey matter memory everything associated with VC-1 or the rival codecs of that time. With regards to AV1, I think the film grain synthesis is a pretty good feature for those who employ that codec because you can just figure that if there wasn’t this option, the streaming content deliverers would simply DNR the content to death to save on bandwidth. There are comparative subjective quality results/pics pointed out by Andrey at about the 23 min. timestamp of that above linked video to show the value of their film grain synthesis. |
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#5777 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#5778 | |
Banned
May 2016
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#5779 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#5780 |
Banned
May 2016
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