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#3001 | |
Blu-ray Knight
Feb 2012
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Hopefully it comes to NYC, as I would be interesting in seeing how a native 70mm title looks as DCP (I've of course seen some in 70mm, and titles like Ben-Hur and Sound of Music are some of my favorite looking classic Blus) and seeing 2001 in a theatrical presentation, though since its 70mm run at Village East Cinemas just ended a couple weeks ago and they do a couple screenings every year in Museum of the Moving Image in early August, possible that they figure the market was already covered by film showings. |
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Thanks given by: | Schism213 (07-24-2018) |
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#3002 | |
Senior Member
Nov 2017
Nott'm, UK
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#3003 | |
Blu-ray Knight
Feb 2012
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And I've been very impressed with some recent DCP restorations of 35mm titles I've seen: namely River of No Return (shown as part of the New York Film Festival), and The Maze (by 3D film archive, though did have perhaps a half dozen iffy shots). Obviously there was no UHDs to compare them to, but the image quality on them was spectacular, while still retaining that clear film-like look originally intended. |
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#3004 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Interesting that he goes out of his way to say that this will be the best way to see an approximation of a film PRINT (i.e., not the OCN). If that wording wasn't unintentional, that could go a long way toward explaining his approach, both (presumably) toward this film and also toward his own films on UHD.
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#3005 | ||
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | Doctorossi (07-23-2018) |
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#3006 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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#3007 | |
Active Member
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Nothing in there says he oversaw anything, or made decisions about anything. "Worked closely with" can mean anything. And Nolan's own quote doesn't actually say he did any decision-making work on the project. Sounds more like promotional patter about how great 4K is. That press release could more easily be read as WB using Nolan's proximity to the project as a way of selling it than that he actually oversaw anything. It's possible he did, but I've seen nothing so far that would seriously indicate that. |
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#3008 | |
Blu-ray Knight
Feb 2012
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#3009 | ||
Blu-ray Emperor
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#3011 |
Blu-ray Prince
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I want Nolan to oversee the home video release of Fantasia. The video would look like it did in theaters in 1990, Deems Taylor's dialog would be inaudible, and the music would be so damn loud, the neighbors would be calling in complaints.
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Thanks given by: | Doctorossi (07-23-2018), legends of beyond (07-23-2018) |
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#3012 |
Expert Member
Jun 2009
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#3013 |
Expert Member
Jun 2009
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So it wasn't just me. Dunkirk had essentially never ending foreground music.... tedious and tiring.
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#3014 | ||
Blu-ray Guru
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WCG can be fantastic together with HDR, but it also seems to be somewhat misunderstood (as better color everywhere all the time). Take a look at Dunkirk for example, colorwise the BD and UHD are nearly identical because there's just nothing in the movie that makes use of the additional saturation that WCG allows for, and of course the whites are just as creamy. Quote:
For me it's also mitigated by a number of points: - Just like with the whitepoint you get used to it and stop seeing it that clearly after a while. - From some semi-objective color theory standpoint, the teal and cream grade of Dunkirk and the 2001 trailer at least looks good, it would have been worse if it were inaccurate/revisionist and looked amateurish and ugly. - For every tealified transfer there's almost never any proof that it's actually inaccurate, other than comparisons to old magenta video transfers or people claiming to remember the exact colors from 35 years ago. So even if it's unlikely there's still that shadow of a doubt you could cling to in most cases. |
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#3015 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Thanks given by: | ArnoldLayne56 (07-24-2018) |
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#3016 |
Blu-ray Knight
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I'm not saying I would skip a tealed 2001, either; just that if given a choice, an accurate grade is much more important to me than the finest level of detail (that level of detail that people never saw on commercial film prints in the first place).
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#3017 | |
Banned
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I had no hope for this when I heard his name and was waiting in shots anyway. |
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#3018 | |
Expert Member
Jun 2009
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Yet you know that Blade Runner isn't accurate ..how ? I simply use films for fifty years up to the time the teal cancer started. Not one or two or some vague memory but every single one. I agree at least for new films the war is lost but it is their choice to go down that path from day one. With films like 2001 it is indeed a revisionist travesty if the final UHD ends up like that trailer. Just use the UHD Lawrence as the reference absolutely incredible: ![]() Last edited by CarlosMeat; 07-23-2018 at 10:19 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | mar3o (07-23-2018) |
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#3019 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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There's a piece which Penton alerted us to on the BBC R&D website about the Royal Wedding and the challenges of capturing it in HDR, the author making note of how SDR 709 is often over-saturated as a quirk of this transfer function being intended for ye olde low-brightness CRTs, referencing how the walls of a castle did indeed have more of a yellowy look in SDR but were paler - and more accurate - in HDR. So while I've made my peace with the teal menace I'm pretty sure that 709 has played its part in amping it up. Something like Dunkirk may well fall inside the 709 gamut anyway, but all the colour science shiznit that was employed on that flick by Fotokem ensured that the deliverables would adhere to the original intent as closely as possible for each format. |
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#3020 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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