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#6661 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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I hope Roger becomes more amenable to HDR like he did with getting the step up in resolution by shooting Sicario Open Gate with the ALEXA XT, where he had otherwise lived and worked in 2.8K for years. |
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#6662 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#6663 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I posted this in the other thread, but it doesnt look as active so ill post it here too to get your impressions.
I keep forgetting to share these pictures. i recommend saving them so you can make them larger and put them up side by side to compare. but this is 4k vs 4k HDR. so they are BOTH 4k, yet extremely different! Notice HDR has richer color, more depth, more dimension, better details in the background. The texture of the smurfs face has lot more detail, and the grooves of his face has dimension and curves, giving it a more 3D look. The first time you see it, it's just insane looking. the regular 4k version in comparison is flat looking, and the colors dont have as good seperation between each other. remember, with SDR, you only get 256 shades, while the HDR version you get over 1000 different shades of each color. the 4k smurf only appears to have 1 color of blue whereas the HDR smurf has multiples shades making up his "skin" the blue is incredibly vibrant, look at the detail of the eyes and vibrancy of blue iris. 4k is good, but HDR is the real game changer. By the way, Stacey Spears of Spectracal made some very good comments/statements about the state of 4k HDR over on AVS and where its heading. in Summary, he loves what HDR brings to the table and says the difference is clearly visible in color and contrast with the demos him and his team have been setting up. says his SDR versions look sabotaged in comparison to purposely look bad (which he knows it isnt since hes the one setting up the tvs). but he believes the 4k push right now is fraudulaent and wants "4k" removed from the boxes and players. But hes a big fan of the color vibrancy and grading. |
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Thanks given by: | Opips3 (01-16-2016) |
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#6664 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Are you sure they're not both 10-bit sources? The amount of "shades" that are technically available for any gamut is related to bit depth, not whether it's simply HDR or SDR. That you're actually seeing more colour in the HDR version is to do with the increased colour volume.
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#6665 |
Active Member
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Quick question: I want to future proof my receiver and projector and 4K bluray player. Should I wait for them all to come with Dolby Vision, or is that going to be a very limited thing studios do on 4K Blurays, if at all? Is HDR enabled discs good enough?
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#6667 | |||
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() I truly admire Stacey’s intelligence and passion to image quality, not to mention that he bought a Playstation 3 for himself for which Amir (of AVS) wasn’t too happy about ![]() ![]() Quote:
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![]() Other than the imprecise ‘two thumbs rule’ introduced by Thomas (a V.P. of Engineering and Development at Fox, you’ll find his ‘in the trench’ insights into image quality regarding Ultra HD Blu-ray, streaming and broadcast to be quite valuable. But alas, you can’t have back-and-forth conversations with him if you require that sort of thing in order to be fulfilled. The panel discussion is the ‘brightcove’ link on this page - https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...271447&page=20 |
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#6668 |
Senior Member
Oct 2007
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To give a brief summary IMF (Interoperable Master Format) was developed to be the distribution format for video services (broadcast, cable, satellite, Blu-ray, DVD, iTunes, Netflix, etc...). DCP is the distribution format for movie theaters and the idea was that IMF would be the distribution format for video services. IMF also reduces costs since it allows for visually lossless compression (5:1 to 15:1) and allows the differences between versions (edits and/or languages) to be stored in a single IMF package instead of having to create a different video file for each version. IMF 1.0 was finished in 2013 and supported 10-bit Rec. 709 4K at up to 30 fps. IMF 1.1 will add several features (HDR, HFR, and WCG) and should be released in a few months.
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#6669 |
Banned
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#6670 | |
Banned
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![]() Everything you said, everyone I said.... You can't downgrade your statement just because its convenient to |
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#6672 |
Banned
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#6673 |
Senior Member
Oct 2007
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HDR, HFR, and WCG have been in development for years and in terms of video quality what else is there? Also HDR in the movie theater only doubles the brightness and it is more about improving the low light details so once a new DCI standard is made why would a director stick with SDR?
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#6674 | |
Banned
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First, spoiler or delete repeat images. Nobody needs to see the exact same thing 2 posts in a row. Second I was making your sentence CORRECT. Most everyone IS shooting digital. Which would mean something if I had claimed, in 2006, "everyone" would be shooting digital in 10 years. Fact is a large amount of major Hollywood releases are getting a HDR grade (Dolby Vision, etc). Eventually *every* film released will get a HDR grade. TVs have been shown that have an auto-HDR setting to "enhance" SDR content. Every UHD-BD announced has a HDR grade. So you tell me if my decade-hence prediction is out of line. |
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#6675 | ||
Blu-ray Samurai
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HDR10 and dolby vision will be here for 10 years bundled with 4k resolution. Not changing anytime soon because they are not ditching 4k bluray after only a couple years. The only thing that will change is the tvs, to take better advantage of the hdr metadata. Maybe eventually dolby vision wins out and every disc has DV as the main hdr, but hdr10 will always be underneath it for those with regular hdr10 tvs. |
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#6677 |
Blu-ray Samurai
Jul 2008
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So every movie ever released in the last 120 years, should be re-graded in HDR because now SDR sucks? (but remember, it was fine till 6 months ago).
Thanks but no Thanks! |
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#6678 |
Banned
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But its the PeterTHX Dolby Vision future and everyone who says no is wrong and needs to be beaten
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#6679 | ||
Banned
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![]() Again, you'd have a point if I'd actually said or indicated that sort of thing. |
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