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#3943 | |
Power Member
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#3944 |
Power Member
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Is this speculative or do you know this to be fact? Warner doesn't seem to have much of an issue with grain based on their previous HD releases. And having just watched the Dirty Harry Collection and Natural Born Killers there is no reason to think they've started having an issue with it now.
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#3947 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Correct me if I'm wrong...
But doesn't every Blu-ray release from every studio contain at least some DNR? In many cases it's very light and hardly noticable - some call it "theraputic." However, once in a while it's way overdone and quite noticable (e.g. Patton, Twister, Face Off). But, isn't DNR just part of the overall practice of creating a Blu-ray? Again, just asking as I'm not entirely sure. Last edited by HeavyHitter; 06-21-2008 at 05:25 AM. |
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#3948 |
Blu-ray Champion
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Yes and no.
As Penton has pointed out, DNR is often applied in the process of making the movie No, DNR is not standard procedure. More often it was on DVD to make it easier to compress and because 480 didn't have the resolution to resolve it in the first place. There's a big difference between theraputic DNR, and the "Kill the grain! Kill it dead!" approach that some studios take |
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#3949 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I really liked Gangs of New York too. But I caught wind that the BD was not up to par and so I cancelled my pre-order. Hopefully Warner will do the right thing and redo this release.
At the other end of the quality spectrum is Men in Black. What a terrific BD. The True-hd audio track is full of life and the video looks quite good as well. |
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#3951 | |
Power Member
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Funny you mention MIB. I thought it looked good all things considered, but a few friends of mine didn't care for the transfer at all. |
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#3952 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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#3953 | |
Active Member
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720p crowd did their part in contributing to that sales figure. As did at least one 5 star PQ rating from a Reviewer http://bluray.highdefdigest.com/1336/iamlegend.html and 4.5 PQ rating from Users https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/movies.php?id=670 It looks like "a very clean shiny look" is what sells and pays some people's salary. Don't look at me. I didn't buy IAL as I hate Will Smith movies. I am the 144" Ronco 1080p crowd and loved the digital camera used for "The Other Boleyn Girl." Bring on the DNR. I vote with my dollars regardless if three people on this forum out of a 32,000 membership voiced their displeasure. Now that we don't have Toshiba to bad mouth any more it seems as though DNR is the new flavor of the day. Last edited by BluDomain; 06-21-2008 at 01:33 PM. |
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#3954 |
Banned
Jul 2007
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You realise that DNR a la Patton does not look like shooting with a Genesis or RED camera, do you? Genesis/RED does not look like plastic, just very clean and noise free (mostly).
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#3955 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Tell me specifically either publicly or in a PM (whichever you prefer) exactly what the problem(s) are with the Blu-ray content, and if the review/observation is professionally and respectfully composed, I’ll be sure to pass your concerns on to the mouse. |
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#3956 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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Logic does not dictate that the "clean and shiny look" sells movies, only that the clean and shiny look does not, in this case cause a movie to sell poorly People bought it because they liked the movie and/or Will Smith. Those are testable, repeatable factors that have proven themselves over time to drive video sales far more than any other factor by huge margins. IAL is so unnaturally clean. The day sequences have fairly light DNR applied to them in comparison so a lot of the high frequency detail still remains. Look at the part where he's looking for the dog in the vamp filled building and it's only lit by a flashlight. That image is 98%+ grain free. Find me any camera/stock in the world with the best lighting team possible that can do that(and yes that includes digital, not even close). Now take a look at Will Smith and you'll see he's just a brown smear on the screen. Just go through the movie looking at the night stuff, and it'll jump right out at you hardcore how smooth and strange looking everything is. |
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#3957 |
Blu-ray Champion
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But don't modern films often use DNR in post before theatrical release?
For example, isn't it possible that the night scenes for IAL were given heavy DNR when they did digital color timing? Maybe not "DNR" specifically, but some kind of digital alterations to the original film elements, especially in scenes with digital visual effects. Hope this all makes sense. ![]() Last edited by captveg; 06-21-2008 at 04:11 PM. |
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#3958 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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There's a difference between what's done to even out grain and such, and what's done here. This is systematic removal of as much grain as possible from the image Grain is often used to break up the unreality of CG. IAL has piles of CG that put their budget totally wonky (would have been done better with suits),and all those creature shots are grain free. The same thing happened with Golden compass, the DNR degrades the oscar-winner FX because it no longer has the protective coating to break up the "too shiny" veneer of CG. |
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#3960 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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I often wonder how awesome the Guillermo del Toro version would have been had he accepted |
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