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#6581 | |
Power Member
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#6582 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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i would think that CGI would be easier to convert to 4k. but if its true that for HDR, they are going after the raw file and not the DI, the whole 2k upscale thing has been blown out of proportion, at least with movies made over the past 4-5 years.
Last edited by ray0414; 01-10-2016 at 07:16 AM. |
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#6583 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Sure, but it circles back to the same sticking point about 4K rebuilds of 2K mastered content in general: with the sheer abundance of digital manipulation (not just VFX) that happens with movies these days it's just not feasible to re-render (or otherwise re-fudge) every such digital shot in 4K, so on 'event' movies especially you're still dealing with a HUGE quantity of 2K material. (AFAIK Dolby aren't taking the 2K VFX files and re-compositing it with the RAW/negative footage either.) That the 2K upscaled stuff will still look good is testament to the fact that 2K isn't the devil's work to begin with.
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#6587 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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#6588 | |
Banned
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Plus 480i legacy talking heads extras are waste of time on blu let alone on UHD |
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#6595 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() Regarding the HDR mastering….Ron to the reporter - We master in Hollywood “with the blessing and support of Hollywood studios” ![]() Regarding the “artistic approval” of the new HDR grade, and what that qualifies as…..Ron to reporter - "the Director himself, or the colorist who worked on the original title, or, a ‘delegate’ to approve the new grade." Well, we’ve seen before the result of “delegates” approving a new grade of Blu-rays……http://cinemalowdown.com/2012/11/cin...exclusive.html The Dolby rep described variance in the “artistic approval” process of the new HDR grade kind of reminds me of going in for a new knee replacement because your current metallic/plastic device is getting worn out or obsolete in terms of allowed range of motion and you want/need something better. The secretary informs you at the pre-op meeting….Sir, your new knee replacement will be re-graded (performed) by one of the following…. the surgeon, himself, who worked on your 1st knee replacement and who is most familiar with your case or, his assistant (not an M.D. but a P.A.) who retracted tissue for him during your first surgery and even whipped his brow with a sterile towel once or twice or, someone else who was standing in the operating room during your first surgery (but not qualified thru education and competency testing to perform surgery on anyone) Fact is, the process of Dolby Vision (HDR) re-grading serves at the mercy of studios and studios often take the path of least resistance (proxies are cheaper and many times more available than the reel deal), so it’s up to the consumer to serve as watchdogs, that means you guys. If there’s nothing to hide, have the person who approved the HDR re-grade listed and make that easily publicly available to the consumer (HDR enthusiasts) on the packaging or in credits or such upon viewing the content itself. Last edited by Penton-Man; 01-10-2016 at 07:47 PM. Reason: fixed typos added a couple phrases |
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#6596 | |
Senior Member
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Similar to video bitrates etc - they're not listed anywhere because most people aren't interested. That's why I have to use BDInfo to obsessively scan all my Blu-ray discs! ![]() |
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#6597 | |
Banned
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#6598 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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“…..We’re going to the RAW files that came right out of the camera” This is a noble approach, if such files have been saved and can be found....BIG ask with some movies. Also, I’ll remind folks that starting from RAW means you’re essentially redoing the whole motion picture over again (expensive). So, a shout out to filmmakers (and studios) who have no present intention of producing an HDR version of their work, right now, but would like to keep their options open in the future and have their work keep abreast with technology....best follow this approach - in other words, put out the dough now to do it right, from the get-go, as you'll have a proper master to work with - https://forum.blu-ray.com/showthread...r#post11150671 and it will save you money in the long run rather than staring all over again from scratch. |
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#6599 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() ![]() Plus, you guys (the hobbyists ![]() Example being the consumer feedback from The Fifth Element Blu-ray back in-the-day which directly precipitated the following being written in the 2007 American Society of Cinematographers Technology Committee Report for the SMPTE Journal in June? of that year, excerpts…. "Under typical home viewing conditions, a growing number of consumers now have a day-to-day display that provides a more critical view of HD sources than what is in popular use in the facilities that master these sources"…… “that there were some serious artifacts showing up in the process of how the down-converts (from the source) were being done to HD that were not seen on CRT monitors, and certainly not seen in standard-def. They are artifacts that got into the system at some point." ^ which served as thee impetus to change mastering practices (shifting from CRTs -> to flat panels) throughout not just Sony, but the rest of Hollywood post houses…and beyond. All facilitated by proactive hobbyists/consumers and one caring professional technologist. |
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#6600 |
Senior Member
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Anyone know where / when the Warner Bros UHD BD's will be available for preorder please? Already pre-ordered most of the Fox and Sony titles
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Thanks given by: | reanimator (01-11-2016) |
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