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View Poll Results: Which edition of "Inception" did you purchase? | |||
Single Disc Edition |
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59 | 6.70% |
Combo Pack: Blu-ray + DVD + Digital Copy |
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532 | 60.45% |
Best Buy Exclusive: Blu-ray + DVD + Digital Copy + Script |
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97 | 11.02% |
FYE Exclusive SteelBook |
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101 | 11.48% |
Futureshop Exclusive SteelBook |
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42 | 4.77% |
WBShop Exclusive Briefcase Gift Set |
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137 | 15.57% |
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 880. You may not vote on this poll |
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Thread Tools | Display Modes |
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#901 |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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#903 | |
Banned
Oct 2010
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#904 | |||
Blu-ray Samurai
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But I'm sorry. Was Inception released to theaters before the advent digital cinema? Or after? I guess I could have been clearer. I said: Quote:
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Between two points. These points are: #1: The source material, in this case, a film master. #2: The print which is exhibited in a theater, in this case, either a 35mm film copy or a digital print. The intermediate allows for efficient and high quality copying. If they used a film intermediate, quality would be lower, it would be more difficult, and then they'd STILL need to produce a digital copy eventually anyway for digital cinema, advertising, home video, and broadcast. Often times, people use DI to refer to the digital color correction process, but that is an unnecessarily narrow understanding of what the entire process entails. The point of an intermediate in film making is to go from the master to copies, and digitally is the best way to do that today. They don't make copies today the same way they did 10 or more years ago. |
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#905 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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http://www.theasc.com/ac_magazine/Ju...tion/page1.php http://www.studiodaily.com/filmandvi...ish_12353.html http://www.technicolor.com/en/hi/abo...film-inception Last edited by 42041; 11-20-2010 at 09:13 PM. |
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#906 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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I did, however, have the same question about Inception as I did for The Matrix: you would think that if you developed technology to invade a 'dream space,' you would also develop a fail safe or firewall so that if something does go wrong (for example, you 'die' in the other realm), you would still survive the process unharmed. Even the most dangerous factory equipment out there has a kill switch of some sort. Otherwise, it's like BP drilling for oil under the ocean floor without first having the ability to avoid potential problems. But maybe that sort of recklessness is just life imitating art... As an aside, I also thought Avatar was quite clever...probably as clever as a 'Dances With Smurfs'-type movie could possibly be. Last edited by Sponge-worthy; 11-20-2010 at 09:15 PM. |
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#907 |
Special Member
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Its definitely clever, but a lot of fans seem to want to paint the movie as a sort of 100% original Intellectually Highbrow classic that no other modern hollywood can touch. There's a pretty huge distinction between the two.
For my part, I think Inception is a great action movie, a very typical heist film seen through a clever lens, but the movie isn't doing anything that hasn't been done before as far as I'm concerned, despite the fact that some people seem to love to think it does. Again, there's nothing wrong with this, there's just no need to pretend the movie is something its not ![]() |
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#908 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I never said he didn't master to film. All I've said is that a digital intermediate was used to create the 35mm prints and the digital prints that went out to theaters. Just because he did not use digital color correction or other common DI techniques, it doesn't mean he was somehow able to MAGICALLY create copies of his film for distribution without using an intermediate. The film was scanned digitally and this digital intermediate is what was used to create every copy of the movie we saw in theaters, and it is the source of the copy we'll be seeing on Blu-ray shortly. Do you contest this point, really? How do you believe the copies were made for theaters to exhibit? Specifically the digital cinemas. How did they exhibit this film without a digital intermediate being used? Did they receive traditional film copies that were made using a film intermediate? How did they make these obsolete lengths of film play on their modern digital projectors? Did they just throw the film at the projector and somehow the digital projector was able to project the film onto the screen without a digital copy which is normally required? |
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#909 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#910 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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On the plus side, a film like Inception would, in most cases, normally be produced as a more independent project with tighter resources, so it is kinda cool to see a more novel use of millions and millions of dollars thrown up on the screen. |
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#911 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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The color-timed interpositive was scanned for the digital master. As such, Inception won't look like most new blockbusters, where the digital master is made from the camera negative. |
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#912 | |
Special Member
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In regards to the movie being "complicated," I just feel that it isn't complicated in a way that matters (thematically, character wise or story-wise) it just comes off as a more complicated due to the fact that some concepts just aren't presented clearly enough, despite all the exposition (or perhaps due to it?) and that the movies pace is pretty relentless, so it can get tough to keep track of everything on a first viewing (and then there is the score that is sometimes so overbearing that you can't hear the dialogue). And that's something that kinda ticks me off, a movie being complicated for the sake of it, and is really my main problem with the film. |
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#913 |
New Member
Nov 2010
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Can anybody confirm that if the image quality is not impressive as mentioned previously on this thread? Actually this is something sounds very unlikely to me; considering the box office success and reception of the movie. Why wouldn't WB do the best for the transfer?
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#914 | |
Special Member
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#915 | |
New Member
Nov 2010
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#916 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The film was entertaining enough, but like others have said, nowhere near as 'original' as the hype would suggest. A 6.5/10 film, with 10/10 PQ & AQ. edit: I dont have equipment for screengrabs (other than a photo of the screen). |
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#917 | |
Banned
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#918 |
Member
Nov 2010
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Yes, this film is excellent, but even though it's worth the investment, no it isn't something that hasn't been done and I don't think any of the producers claimed as such. Look at Dark City. Alex Proyas has always been fascinated by dreams and took a similar idea for his flm Dark City (puts the citizens asleep while the strangers manipulate the world around them). He had plans to produce his film 'Book of Dreams' years ago, but that hasn't happened yet. I was in the process of writing some dream sequences for him, until I realized I would only get name credit and no money. Who needs that. Show me the money and I'll show you script. No wonder that film hasn't got done.
Last edited by Starbuy; 11-21-2010 at 12:22 AM. |
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#920 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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EXACTLY. Nolan would be the first one to admit his influences and he's also the first one to say that it's just a heist film influenced by sci-fi stuff like the Matrix and Dark City. Nothing more. It's a damn good sci-fi heist flick and I appreciate it for what it is. Last edited by Blu-Malibu2009; 11-21-2010 at 01:17 AM. |
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