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#1 |
Active Member
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Hey everyone, I have recently been wondering about grain. I particularly do not like it and think that it hinders an otherwise amazing viewing experience, but I know that the studios intentionally put it in their movies. Is there some reason why they do this. I personally think that there is nothing as beautiful as watching a blu-ray with no grain. I have seen mixed reactions to grain on this site. It seems there are many like me who do not like it, but there are others I have seen who say it makes sense that they put the grain in the movies. Perhaps I am just not getting it, but what is the benefit. I have been buying and watching blu-rays since I got my ps3 back at launch, and never noticed the grain on my 106" projector screen. I didn't know about it until I started watching them on my brother's dlp big screen tv. I at first thought that it was a problem with my ps3, that something had gone wrong with it, but then after posting a thread about it on this site and reading some the comments, and the reading some other stuff on this site, I came to conclude that it was the grain I was seeing. So my questions are, first why do they put grain in movies, and second is grain as noticeable on a large projector screen. I don't get why I didn't see it on my projector screen but it is painfully noticeable on smaller tvs. If someone could enlighten me, it would be much appreciated. Thank you.
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#2 |
Member
Jan 2008
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Grain is inherent in film.
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#3 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#5 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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I can't really answer what grain is exactly, but it's not always intentional. It's just something that happens with film. It's added to digitally shot movies to make them look like they were filmed though. I don't really see the point either, but the director is the artist, not me, so who am I to complain.
As for your second question Quote:
If I were to venture a guess, I'd be guessing that you're seeing some sort of digital noise on the TV possibly due to the sharpness setting being too high. I don't know if this setting would also make grain more noticeable if set too high as well. |
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#6 |
Expert Member
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I can't imagine Schindler's List or Saving Private Ryan without grain... the grain that Spielberg left in these movies added to the overall ambiance and emotion. It's the same for the prologue of Casino Royale. The black and white scenes in the beginning of the movie were intentionally done grainy for the overall effect of flash-back. The rest of the movie is prestine with hardly any grain at all. Horror movies are often very grainy, because less visibility often hightens anxiety. Grain is a tool directors use... in fact, one of the reasons why directors hesitated for so long to use digital cameras when making films was because digital cameras didn't capture scenes are warmly as the grainy film cameras. Without grain, movies will look like home videos. It took a while for digital cameras to have a grainy effect... then they took off.
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#7 | |
Special Member
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there is a difference between beautiful PQ and grain. Just because a movie has grain doesnt mean the PQ is bad |
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#8 |
Member
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To overly simplify things... Grain is tiny crystals or silver on the film that record an image when it is exposed to light. The size of the grain is dependent on the speed of the film stock and whether the cinematographer over or underexposed the negative.
For instance the 300 was shot on iso 500 speed film and Larry Fong underexposed in most scenes by 2 stops. This left an immense amount of grain on the image. But the payoff is he was able to shoot amazing slow motion sequences without a huge amount of light. It's not always budget related since Transformers was mostly shot on 500 speed stock. But the faster the film speed the larger the crystals and the more grain you will see. Also many cinematographers underexpose the film and then push it to correct exposure in the lab to bump up the contrast and give the film a harsh look... for example Mathew Libatique did this with The Fountain, this causes more grain. While in Requiem for a Dream he overexposed most of the scenes and pulled the film giving the image a softer look. Now on the other hand in a film like Pirates cinematographer Darius Wolski chose to shoot the daylight scenes on iso 50 speed film stock which has smaller crystals and therefore much less grain... in fact it's hardly noticeable except in a theater. All film has some grain whether you notice it or not if you blew the image up large enough you will see grain. I love it and think it adds to the experience. It's not usually something the Director decides to throw in for effect... this does happen every now and then, like in the Grindhouse pictures, but overall this is very rare. I hope this helps! And in case you're wondering I shoot film for a living... ![]() Last edited by Gavin Von Karls; 02-27-2008 at 07:23 AM. |
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#9 |
Special Member
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![]() ![]() Film Grain It's the vibe or mood, a richness and depth that can leave a digital image looking sterile or anteseptic. Film can be looked at as a form of poitntalism, patterns of distinct colors that the eye uses to produce other colors. Georges Seurat, 1859-1891, a Neo-Impressionist painter, creates a grain-like structure using a method called divisionism made famous by such works as La Parade de Cirque. The idea was to "produce tints more luminus then thoes obtainable from pigment mixed on the palette" - H.W. Janson. Some Prominent Impressionest Artists:
Recent Exmples Grain is part of what the 'Director Intended' - Screen Shots
Other Posts
![]() Back to The HD POST Last edited by U4K61; 02-23-2012 at 09:15 PM. |
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#10 |
Special Member
Aug 2007
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#12 |
Active Member
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Whytewash, I agree that blu-rays, even with grain, still are amazing pictures, but to me, the grain is just distracting, I guess it is just something I will have to get used to.
To Bajor27, I guess some setting could be off on my brother's tv, but I truly did not notice it at all on my projector. I don't know why that is if what you are saying is true, which I am not doubting. I am in the process of moving and my projector is packed away. I will have to wait until I am all settled into the new place to watch movies on my projector again and see if I notice it then. Maybe I had just watched movies on nothing but my projector for so long, that a picture on a tv just seemed different. Or maybe (I just thought of this and it seems like it probably is the reason) I didn't notice the grain on my projector because I didn't get my glasses until after I had it packed away. I've always had perfect eyesight until about a year and a half ago, just before I first heard about blu-ray, but then my eyes started getting pretty bad. I didn't do anything about it until a couple of months ago because I didn't want to wear glasses. Pretty retarded huh. But shortly after I packed away my projector I got some glasses and it has been a big difference. The pictures on blu-rays have even made a big jump in quality, despite the appearance of grain. Maybe I am just now seeing ![]() |
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#13 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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DVD has this problem licked. Almost. I was watching The Brotherhood of the Wolf a couple days back and guess what I saw only extremely toned down due to the DVD PQ....?
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#15 |
Banned
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im quite used to the grain now and you can hardly see it anyway once you come away from the tv.If you bring the detail out of the film the grain is gonna come with it.I think when its really really noticable thats probably when its been actually put onto the film on purpose i dont pretend to be an expert or anything.
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#17 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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Thank you so much Gavin!!! This should be stickied. Last edited by Deciazulado; 02-27-2008 at 05:37 PM. Reason: quote updated |
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#18 | |
Active Member
Oct 2007
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#20 | |
Special Member
Sep 2007
verge of breakdown
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![]() Quote:
![]() Last edited by Deciazulado; 02-27-2008 at 05:37 PM. Reason: quote updated |
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