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#441 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Never claimed anything else. I just don't have a problem with it being applied to films before theatrical HDR was a thing, which is in the part of my post that you left out (BOY you do that a lot). I'm not saying it's not revisionist, I'm saying that I don't really give a **** any more. Audio though, that's a different story...
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#442 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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This thread started because RAH was arguing HDR was revisionism for older films (since the theatrical HDR target did not exist) and has continued because many others strongly disagreed with that. If we have landed now at the point that RAH is correct that HDR is revisionism but some prefer that revisionism I am in agreement with that - in fact I also often prefer the revisionist video. I just disagreed with those trying to claim HDR was somehow original intent for older films and that RAH was incorrect. Last edited by Ruined; 10-11-2018 at 07:47 PM. |
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#443 | |
Power Member
Nov 2013
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#444 | |
Power Member
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I guess I'd have to hear what is so revisionist about HDR grades on catalog movies. If the answer is that "HDR" did not exist when the movie was shot, then I do not accept that answer, as "HDR" is just a descriptor that means High Dynamic Range. Generally speaking, SDR Blu-rays are incapable of reproducing the dynamic range of film, and HDR helps approach that more accurately. However, if your position is that HDR is, more often than not, being used in a revisionist manner, then I can see where you are coming from. I still need some further arguments, though, I think. |
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#445 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | Armakuni (11-13-2020) |
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#446 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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The target for older films was theatrical exhibition, which at the time did not exceed SDR, by far. In fact the vast majority of theaters are still SDR and even the small slice of HDR ones cannot fully reproduce the range HDR is capable of. What you can do with the negative in post is nearly limitless so having something that can reproduce more of the negative when that range was never available theatrically (the intended target) just gives you more opportunity to foul it up. More opportunity to be fouled up both at the studio end when its mastered and at the user end when it has to be tonemapped to whatever the display is capable of. For older films 4k SDR BT2020 best represents the theatrical target of the time and also does not require the dynamic tonemapping that occurs with HDR. It technically is the most accurate way of capturing intent and ensuring the user sees that intent. HDR adds unnecessary headroom that only serves to make the end result less accurate to the theatrical target of the time and thus is undesirable if accuracy/intent is the goal. On the other hand, if the intent is to resell an older film using HDR marketing and more exciting video HDR is very useful for that purpose with older films. |
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#447 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I've said this before but I found it rather amusing that the prints that were struck of Godfather I & II's 4K restoration weren't to Gordon Willis' liking at all because the capabilities of the data outstripped the capabilities of the analogue projection medium, in his own words: "...the positive available isn’t doing the job we all hoped for. The print stock I saw doesn’t produce a full and comfortable range from black to white, and the mid range is compressed as well. Everyone is pursuing a solution".
If you were to ask RAH then he'd go for the data projection every time and that in its own way shows how we're only too happy to move the technological goalposts to suit our own desires and expectations when it suits us. I'm not saying that this relates to his attitude towards HDR per se but some film buffs would be horrified that a man like RAH would advocate a digital screening over a print and yet he's said the same thing about other films too, that he'd prefer watching a DCP to all but the most ultra-pristine showprint minted off the negative. |
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#448 |
Blu-ray Guru
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What someone might intend to do could be theater projection, but what they actually do is the negative.
Displays have always had discrepancies, including theaters themselves. What your display is doing wrong can be attributed to your display rather than to the format. Any arguments that theater projection wasn't capable of accurately displaying what's on film, and that film is generationally removed from the actual source, just makes a case against theater projection and the film reels they receive being a compromised experience. Some people might want the authentic 80's crack experience, and the dealer may never have intended you to snort pure, uncut Coumbian cocaine without baking soda, flour etc in it, but home video HDR can get you a direct line to Pablo Escobar. |
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#449 | |
Power Member
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Would the most accurate possible HDR grade look any different from/less accurate than the most accurate possible SDR BT2020 grade? |
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#450 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Filmmakers often have George Lucas syndrome of wanting to constantly revise their works and that is fine. Usually the purists go for the original artist theatrical intent, because current artist intent is inherently revisionist as the goalposts frequently move as technology advances.
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#451 | |
Power Member
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#452 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Also note UHD SDR is potentially superior to BD SDR because of wide color gamut, even though no releases have been mastered in this fashion. Last edited by Ruined; 10-11-2018 at 08:29 PM. |
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#453 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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As for the 4K HDR being the equivalent of the purest Bolivian bingo dust, Geoffy be like ![]() |
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#454 |
Blu-ray Knight
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#455 | |
Power Member
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On top of that the extremely minor revisionism that comes with most of these catalog titles means that, as a package, the whole thing is quite lovely. I still would like some clarification on what exactly is revisionist about the whole thing. Can you show me something present in an HDR grade that would be impossible on the negative? This is an area of ignorance for me and I am asking genuinely: what is revisionist about HDR when used in a manner other than "SDR in an HDR container" for catalog films? |
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Thanks given by: | painted_klown (10-11-2018) |
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#456 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Its about being impossible to display in a theater in 1965. The filmmaker sets the cameras (all settings have tradeoffs), uses filters, adjusts lighting, captures the negative and then develops the negative all with the intended target of your eyes sitting in that theater in 1965. And at that time, the hardware was woefully incapable of producing anything remotely beyond SDR and the filmmaker knows this. Therefore logically the original intent cannot be anything greater than SDR as no target beyond SDR existed at that time. Hence anything beyond the SDR range must be revisionist for that time period. If the filmmaker says 50 years later they love what HDR does for their film and they wish it could of looked that way originally (like Lucas says for his star wars revisions) its still revisionist even if current artist intent; the original intent was the decisions made for whatever was put up on that SDR screen in 1965. Last edited by Ruined; 10-11-2018 at 08:45 PM. |
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#457 |
Special Member
May 2017
Earth v1.1, awaiting v2.0
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![]() Last edited by Staying Salty; 10-11-2018 at 08:41 PM. Reason: changed title |
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#458 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | Kris Deering (10-12-2018), StingingVelvet (10-12-2018) |
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#459 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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[Show spoiler]
Last edited by Ruined; 10-11-2018 at 09:16 PM. |
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