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#3761 |
Active Member
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I for one would love to see Metropolis in HD.
From memory when they did the recent digital restoration they scanned and editted all at 2k. The DVD edition of it looked pretty amazing. |
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#3762 | |
Super Moderator
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I expect to see Blu-ray campaigns similarly on ALL the big day and date titles from now on, it really is imperative. Please pass on the word Paid, thanks dude. |
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#3763 | |
Active Member
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#3764 | |
Site Manager
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#3765 |
Active Member
Oct 2006
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I know there has been speculation, but is there any confirmation on any titles coming out that will use BD+?
If so, which will be the first? Is there any indication on how confident the studios are that BD+ won't be cracked right away? And are there going to be new AACS keys being used soon? I read somewhere there was something planned for this fall to defeat AnyDVD's copy scheme. Thanks |
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#3766 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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#3767 |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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Regarding the more economical eCinema display I linked, for people unaware, the founder of eCinema and the guy that spearheaded the development of their new LCD is Martin Euredjian.
Suffice to say when Euredjian speaks, everybody listens…………..and I mean everybody –even the likes of paidgeek, Charles Poynton, etc. So I would expect the quality of that display to be special given its price point. |
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#3768 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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New keys are being used on new fantastic 4 movie, but not BD+ was used on that titles.. |
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#3769 | |
Retired Hollywood Insider
Apr 2007
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![]() First of all, I believe you’re mixing up the terms…..”film restoration” and “film preservation’’. I think you are referring to “film preservation” per se. Even among the experts, this discussion can get robust and contentious. I think the consensus still is that the best entity to “preserve” is still the film negative ; however, more and more “digital archiving” is being done. To that end, the Science and Technology Council of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will soon be issuing a report on their take on digital preservation. Specifically in regards to your question about Digital Intermediates, from the perspective of studios’ that are leaders in the process of film restoration and preservation like Sony Pictures, WB, Disney, and Fox, since the digital intermediate revolution has come about (with more and more current feature film post production involving the DI process), it has become increasingly financially viable for the Asset Management Dept. of a studio to do 4K DI’s of old films……….if, the condition of the original film elements justifies the process. Also, with the thought of Digital Cinema theatrical presentations hopefully coming to a Cineplex near you, that driving force certainly encourages this type of “preservation” of old films. However (and this may seem surprising to some), keep in mind that even with modern day motion pictures that were shot by the cinematographer in the *digital* format like Superman Returns ……….. the current thinking is that the best way to “preserve” features like that is still on film. Meaning the digital files are laser-recorded onto YCM separation masters (prints on high-quality black-and-white Kodak film ![]() Ironic, eh ? In the meantime, those digital films that were originally shot in the digital format with things like the Panavision Genesis or the Viper camera or those that received a digital intermediate as part of their life in the production pipeline, are cared for by storing them in the latest digital format and then migrating them into the newest digital format in accordance with progressive changes in digital platforms and technology…..i.e. maybe every 4 or 5 years or so. Now, in terms of “film restorations” done for the sole and specific reason of immediate gratification for the home video enthusiastic (where film archiving or future Digital Cinema presentation is generally not of concern). There are exceptions but that is a completely different animal. That process is more aptly termed “video remastering” or “video restoration”. Granted it does not involve a full blown “film restoration” that easily costs hundreds of thousands of dollars depending upon the condition of the original elements but, it is generally better than just using old video masters…… and it sure gets the title out to the public on high-def optical disc months, if not years, sooner. Excuse any typos or what not above but I typed up the above response very rapidly and I'm now in the process of limping on out the door. |
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#3770 |
Active Member
Aug 2007
Trondheim, Norway
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I'm sorry if this question has been answered earlier somewhere but anyway, here goes;
Has there been any indication that Criterion will make any Blu-ray editions of "their" movies? |
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#3771 |
Senior Member
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I know we recently heard from Paid several times on why WB won't do optimized encodes for BR. I was wondering if any insiders can comment on whether we might see re-releases after they go exclusive with optimized encodes.
After just purchasing Troy, I was very disappointed in the lack of detail and have decided (again) that I will no longer purchase any WB titles until they do quality releases. It's a shame that we'll get Blade Runner without lossless audio and likely have the Harry Potter series released with just an above average PQ. I wouldn't worry about this if I felt there was a strong chance we would see re-releases in the coming year. Is this a likely scenario or is this something they wouldn't do because it would be admitting to a mistake or because cost would be too high? |
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#3772 | |
Expert Member
Oct 2006
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thanx Marek |
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#3773 |
Expert Member
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Here is a question for kJack:
Keith - a few months ago you mentioned some great news coming to BD concerning hardware in the fall. Also I remember you saying something about great news for Q4 and Q5. So, have any of these been announced yet and can you give us hints as to the current timing? Thanks! Kurt |
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#3774 | |
Special Member
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I'm guessing that the cost of film restorage is divided between scanning, hunting down film element, and labor-intensive work of removing dust and scratches. Commenting on the last: We've seen an Internet-community approach to searching satellite scans for that lost flyer out West. We've also seen folks run "screen blanker" programs that actually spend idle compute cycles on cancer and genome compute-intensive tasks. That is, the tasks are divided across all the idle PCs across the net. We've also seen open-source community efforts. So, imagine a time where applications exist to divide up the hand-restoration tasks, then farm it out to individuals on the net (assume sufficient net bandwidth). Then everyone takes a piece of film, guides the correction on their piece, then transmits it back. This might lower costs sufficiently to restore films that might otherwise be ignored. Or am I just talking out my hat ![]() -Jim |
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#3775 | |
Junior Member
Sep 2007
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When it decodes audio onboard, can it output the results as PCM in the audio portion of the HDMI datastream? It's probably obvious, but I couldn't find it in the SMP8634 blurb. Thanks. |
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#3776 |
Contributor
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I believe I read right here on these forums the Criterion is waiting for a format winner to emerge before they release anything. So it will probably be some time before we see anything from them.
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#3777 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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The real problem is that a lot of the work is done by hand, painting out scratches and the like. I'm sure it could be useful for some baseline stuff, and worth looking into especially for smaller companies for whom and automated scrubbing is what they can afford. Since most of the packages are already set up for distributed processing over ethernet, it shouldn't be too bad to do the same for a net distro. Just keep iin mind that saving the negatives is paramount |
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#3778 | |
Expert Member
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#3779 | |
Blu-ray Insider
Jan 2007
Milpitas, CA, USA
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#3780 | |
Senior Member
Sep 2005
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How does the Director's intent for things like the amount of grain and such get accurately conveyed to the multitude doing the work? And... Photoshopped movie frames? Easter eggs in films? |
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thread | Forum | Thread Starter | Replies | Last Post |
Official Custom Cover Art Thread(Archived Posts) | Blu-ray Movies - North America | Trean | 2598 | 05-21-2009 07:22 AM |
Archived: Ask the Insiders: Judgment Day Edition | Insider Discussion | Chris Beveridge | 3039 | 01-15-2008 11:34 AM |
Should the old insider's thread be archived? | Feedback Forum | DJeffries | 4 | 12-16-2007 07:54 PM |
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