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View Poll Results: Should i make this a 4K DI only thread or continue the way it is ? | |||
Only 4K DI |
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10 | 28.57% |
Continue the way it is |
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25 | 71.43% |
Voters: 35. You may not vote on this poll |
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#1461 | ||
Blu-ray Guru
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With Nolan's films, do they scan an interpositive to make the DCP, or is a DI done from negative scans to replicate the look of the IP? On "The Master" they had separate optical and digital workflows for for the grading, depending on the output format. FotoKem’s Workflow for The Master in 70mm, 35mm, and 4K |
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#1462 | |
Banned
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#1463 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Plus, considering photochemical timing allows for a more range of colors and isn't limited by resolution, I can see where PTA and Nolan are coming from. Even films shot in film but scanned digitally still have an artificial look to them because of that type of grading. Besides photochemical timing is actually a lot cheaper than a DI. Cheaper yet better quality. It's a win-win. |
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#1465 |
Blu-ray Baron
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I did, but each DI suite I research on is just too much money. Especially Baselight. Digital has its perks but they don't outnumber film for me. I can't get past the artificial look. It's like that Chips Ahoy quote Nolan gave. I should relate since I bake cookies myself.
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#1466 | |
Banned
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I guarantee you, your eyes don't have film grain when you use them to look at the real world. |
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Thanks given by: | PeterTHX (06-12-2015) |
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#1467 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Natural doesn't mean real life. Films shouldn't look at all like real life. All this talk about higher frame rates, higher resolution, high dynamic range, etc. that we have forgotten about the most important thing: it's not about what we can make a film look like, but how it should look like, depending on the setting and story of that particular film. I've seen all the Hobbit films in the way Peter Jackson intended for them to be seen and the irony is that they're supposed to look like looking through a window, yet it looks faker than it would be in 24 fps, at least to me.
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#1468 | |
Banned
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#1469 |
Senior Member
May 2015
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#1470 | |
Banned
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http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/new...ng-film-178661
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Film is film. Digital is digital. They are different. |
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#1471 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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The dynamic range is one area where the Alexa does very well for itself, and that's why it's become the 'go to' camera for digital acquisition in the last few years. It's not about the 2.8K/3.4K resolution (which doesn't count for a whole heck of a lot with a bayer array anyway) but that dynamic range is key.
As for Nolan, in case it isn't clear: timed IPs are used to create the DCPs for his movies (and, one would also assume, the DSMs from which other releases like home video are derived). |
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#1472 | |
Senior Member
May 2015
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Human eyes also have more range in the highlights, therefore film looks more pleasing and natural to us. |
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#1473 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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Last edited by 42041; 06-12-2015 at 10:41 PM. |
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#1474 | |
Banned
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#1475 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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And that's why I don't think Tarantino is a "hypocrite" for shooting on film and finishing/distributing on digital, because he's getting the best of both worlds.
It's kinda ironic that you can have old anamorphic 35mm shows with much more detail than what Nolan's 21st century movies kick out, and why? Because they're transferred from the negative and given a digital grade, instead of the photochemical IP timing that he insists upon as the basis for his deliverables. Nolan's heavily into soft-looking 35mm stuff anyway, such is his fondness for old glass, but still: a digital finish would be able to extract more detail without sacrificing the glossy old-school Panavision look. Last edited by Geoff D; 06-12-2015 at 10:54 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | PeterTHX (06-12-2015) |
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#1476 | |
Banned
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#1477 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Not with today's chemicals and generation prints gap has gotten smaller in recent years. I did a comparison of a 35mm showing of Inherent Vice and a digital showing of the same film. The 35mm print showed off more dynamic range and details than digital presentation, and if it was vice versa, I would've gladly admitted that I stood corrected.
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#1478 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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Whatever its other qualities, 35mm film lost the resolution wars long ago. |
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Thanks given by: | Geoff D (06-13-2015) |
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#1479 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I've never been as impressed with other movies shot on digital that embiggen at key moments (or have a taller IMAX ratio, period) because all they're doing is removing the letterbox mattes, not switching to an entirely different format. |
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#1480 | |
Banned
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