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#5101 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#5102 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Thanks for confirming you received them. ![]() |
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#5103 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#5104 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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I thought thats why, shame, i was looking forward to introducing my daughter to Ghostbusters on Blu.
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#5105 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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~Alan |
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#5107 | |
Power Member
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MPEG-4 AVC and Microsoft's VC-1 format both use liberal amounts of inter-frame compression. That alone will make any still screen-grab from Blu-ray a flawed image. Unless someone is viewing the original, uncompressed high definition master or is viewing a Motion JPEG2000 encode for D-cinema they're not going to be looking at something where every movie frame is a discrete, separate image. |
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#5108 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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#5109 | |
Banned
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But a screenshot isn't worthless. For instances of extremely excessive noise reduction (let's just say Patton since that's the most talked about disc in regards to this), a screenshot showing the waxy veneer over actors' entire faces is able to showcase the problem. I'm not saying that's exactly how the film looks in motion, or that you can definitively judge every pixel. But the screenshot is definitely trustworthy in regards to basic questions like "has grain been significantly reduced in this image." There's no way an entire screen's worth of grain and high-frequency detail magically appears once that frame is put in motion with the surrounding frames. Now I'm not at all advocating the obsessive over-analysis of images, and some of the stuff seen both here and at other forums is absolutely ridiculous. But at the same time, it pangs me to hear people completely dismiss screenshots as useless just because they aren't AS useful as some people think they are. |
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#5110 | ||||
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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The reality is that usually I would go to a theatre once or twice a year, but I do do BD right (as well as my pocket book can afford) at home and it is not a delusion that chances are that it will look better here then at the theatre. The problem is (and why I said you are as bad as the people you are chastizing) when you say that someone can't be a film afectionado, like quality and beleive they have better A/V at home. Chances are these people (self proclaimed or not) will put in the effort at home to have a proper set-up. (then again I did see a post/review of somoen that was comparing stuff on his small 720p TV and talking about artifacts withought understanding that either his TV or player is downscaling so he has no way of knowing if the artifacts where on the disk or in his set-up) |
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#5111 | |
Blu-ray Guru
Sep 2006
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Last edited by Rob Tomlin; 11-05-2008 at 11:52 PM. |
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#5112 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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#5113 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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As for the first comparison and Josh Z's inability to notice it isn't saying a lot... we are talking about Josh Z here... ![]() ~Alan |
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#5114 | |
Special Member
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1. they seem to be better sound proof. Seldom to I hear the action movie next door seep through the walls. 2. All are assigned seating. This does mean I only plan to see movies in advance and never just wing it, but it also means that I always have a good seat. I will plan 1 or 2 days ahead or the morning of the movie, go online and purchase my particular seats I want. If they have nothing in the area I like, I check a different theatre or plan for another day. But at least I never buy a ticket, walk in and see only the front 2 rows or only seats next to the walls open. I wish every place did that |
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#5115 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The biggest problem i find with American cinemas is that mobile phones appear to be permitted. Thats a no no in Ireland. Also the seating level incline is quite shallow and therefore if there is someone of equal height as yourself sitting in front of you viewing the movies is difficult. Of course this is not a problem witm IMAX screens.
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#5116 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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#5117 | |
Banned
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It is very hard, if not impossible, to definitively prove or convince someone of something about issues below a certain threshold - there will always be outside variables. But for larger, more visible issues, screenshots + a little common sense can be a workable solution for internet-based discussion. If it's something that ACTUALLY distracts during a normal viewing (i.e., not something you had to freeze-frame, zoom, check bitrates, run low-pass filters on, etc.), then it's probably something that can be discussed in a reasonable fashion without worrying that one person's equipment is inferior or something. Last edited by neo_reloaded; 09-10-2008 at 03:06 PM. |
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#5118 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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#5119 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() Technically, regarding facial appearance…………. Keep in mind, people should realize that there are caveats with more modern motion pictures……if in fact, people truly consider Directors’ intent to be of greater importance than any personal preference for some facial appearance that they may like or dislike. I believe I first commented generally on the situation here last May……. https://forum.blu-ray.com/showpost.p...postcount=3158 And this is a specific example for which I know to be true……….. https://forum.blu-ray.com/showpost.p...postcount=3614 |
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#5120 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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I already mentioned weeks ago that the only people of true importance, those being the home media tech gurus in the major Hollywood studios, don’t use screenshots to asses for any real or perceived problems with an encode. They pop the Blu-ray disc in a Blu-ray player and watch the sequence in real-time to get an idea of its true eye-to-brain appearance or significance. Consumers who watch movies…….to truly view the movie for entertainment purposes (which are why movies are made in the first place) watch and think in terms of 24 fps, not in frame by frame screenshots. This fact is not lost upon filmmakers either. For example, I was speaking about Seabiscuit on the last page. As a major determining factor whether or not to go the digital intermediate route or go through the traditional photochemical route, the DP conducted tests in which he shot five race horses in various scenes and employed several post houses (unbeknownst to them) to run the Super 35 test footage through their digital intermediate processes and also to have Technicolor do a traditional photochemical print. These tests were shown to a group of American Society of Cinematographers at the ASC clubhouse in Hollywood back in the day. They were displayed in real-time, not frame by frame or even slow speed projection to the group of cinematographers. Unofficially, everyone in attendance preferred the digital intermediate processes from Efilm, Cinesite and Technique compared to the optical test from Technicolor. And do you know what was the major determining factor for which post house should get the DI contract ? A real-time workflow. Essentially, at that particular time, Technique was the only post house of the three, that could color correct in real-time compared to the other facilities and back then, as well as to this day, it is felt by filmmakers and colorists that working in real-time is critical to get a feel for a scene, because viewing it in real-time, one will see it differently rather than viewing it at 4 or 6 fps…… much less single frame screen grabs. The importance of working in real-time as well as viewing in real-time can not be overemphasized as to how our brain perceives imagery during sincere motion picture watching. |
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