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[ "The eager gaze of the uninitiated" ]

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Old 07-10-2008, 10:55 AM   #31 of 40
Doug Otte
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


There's seems to be a contradiction here in the industry's approach. If BDs are being marketed to viewers with smaller displays, why eliminate grain and detail with DNR? It would seem that grain and detail would be less visible on smaller displays anyway, right?

Doug
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Old 07-10-2008, 01:37 PM   #32 of 40
Felix Martinez
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


Quote:
Originally Posted by Ed St. Clair
Cute & catchy! :-)
Thanks. Hey, how 'bout a T-shirt?



Felix E. Martinez
My "All-Spin" Zone of fave Blu-ray, DVD-Audio, SACD, and other assorted new media goodies...
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Old 07-10-2008, 02:11 PM   #33 of 40
Stephen_J_H
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


Me likey.



\"My opinion is that (a) anyone who actually works in a video store and does not understand letterboxing has given up on life, and (b) any customer who prefers to have the sides of a movie hacked off should not be licensed to operate a video player.\"-- Roger Ebert
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Old 07-10-2008, 03:04 PM   #34 of 40
Ed St. Clair
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


Quote:
Originally Posted by Felix Martinez
Thanks. Hey, how 'bout a T-shirt?
Nice job, Felix!
Are those available at the HTF store?
JJ



Movies are: "The Greatest Artform".
HD should be for EVERYONE!
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Old 07-10-2008, 03:23 PM   #35 of 40
Paul_Scott
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


Quote:
This motion picture was created using the photochemical film system. We have attempted to preserve, as closely as possible, the look of the original elements. Because of its high resolution, this Blu-ray Disc can reveal grain and other analog attributes of the source.
This is EXACTLY the kind of approach I was thinking of was when I was screaming about the need for inserts a while back. With the small size of the cases, there is little room for a blurb like this on the outer jacket. But a notation like this should be prominently visible when you first open the case.
I would take it even further and play up the original source technical aspects as much as possible (film stock used, lenses, etc). This won't mean jack to 99% of the people out there, but it would solidify the impression the the film therein is special and unique and not meant to look like a one-size-fits-all DiscoveryHD broadcast.
I think getting the studios in the habit of relaying information like that, is not only going to begin to educate the consumer, but also keep the studios attention focused where it should be- the pride in faithful, high fidelity reproduction.

Last edited by Paul_Scott : 07-10-2008 at 03:32 PM.
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Old 07-11-2008, 04:58 PM   #36 of 40
Ed St. Clair
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At least SOMEONE is paying attention!


HiDef Digest (small exsert):
"From the opening shot to the closing credits, skin textures and fine details aren't just haunted by a waxy appearance, they’ve been completely plasticized by an over-exuberant grain scrubber in a bottom-rung production house. At times, it looks as if the actors have been painted onto the screen while, at others, the same actors look as if they’ve been superimposed onto CG-enhanced backdrops. Depth has been erased, the foregrounds don’t naturally coexist with the backgrounds, three-dimensionality has been compromised, and the filmic nature of ‘The Longest Day’ has been sullied. By comparison, the piddling level of DNR applied to ‘Patton’ seems like a complete non-issue. I’m usually quite forgiving when a transfer doesn’t have any other debilitating issues aside from DNR, but it’s so offensive and obvious in this case that I have to protest."
Full review:
Blu-ray Review: The Longest Day | High-Def Digest



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Old 07-12-2008, 09:14 PM   #37 of 40
Cassy_w
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


This was posted in another forum by someone who claims to have worked on PATTON. This is scary and this situation needs to stop.

Quote:
The company I work for now has come up with a process to remove all of the film grain so we can make the image as sharp as possible then we add grain back to the picture, but not as much. When we do a lot of the film transfers we have either the DP or the director there to supervise the transfer, so if they don’t like it we change it to how they want it. On the older movies the studios will make the call.

Putting grain back in is a lie. You are adding noise that wasn't there. You are changing the film! This is a disgrace. Why the hell should I or anyone else invest in a large High Def display if we won't be able to see films as they were meant to be seen?



Death to PG-13! And now death to DVNR too!!
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Old 07-12-2008, 10:02 PM   #38 of 40
Dave Moritz
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


Quote:
he company I work for now has come up with a process to remove all of the film grain so we can make the image as sharp as possible then we add grain back to the picture, but not as much. When we do a lot of the film transfers we have either the DP or the director there to supervise the transfer, so if they don’t like it we change it to how they want it. On the older movies the studios will make the call.

Quote:
Putting grain back in is a lie. You are adding noise that wasn't there. You are changing the film! This is a disgrace. Why the hell should I or anyone else invest in a large High Def display if we won't be able to see films as they were meant to be seen?

This entire train wreck of DNR'ing the grain out and lossing picture detail is a big slap in the face. A big slap in the face to all the early adopters that jumped in right away buying 1st generation players and building large Blu-ray and HD-DVD library's. And to everyone that adobted Blu-ray and spent the money buying hardware and software after having friends talk them into investing into HD. This is something that if unchecked and allowed to continue and used with more HD titles, this could seriously hurt Blu-ray growth and acceptance.

I personally will not spend my hard earned money on titles that employ this rediculous practice. It is obsurbed and should not be happening, are the studios trying to derail Blu-ray or just catering to a small group of consumers who care nothing about how movies should look?



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Old 07-14-2008, 12:08 AM   #39 of 40
Ed St. Clair
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


Quote:
Originally Posted by Dave Moritz
This entire train wreck of DNR'ing the grain out and lossing picture detail is a big slap in the face. A big slap in the face to all the early adopters that jumped in right away buying 1st generation players and building large Blu-ray and HD-DVD library's. And to everyone that adobted Blu-ray and spent the money buying hardware and software after having friends talk them into investing into HD. This is something that if unchecked and allowed to continue and used with more HD titles, this could seriously hurt Blu-ray growth and acceptance.

I personally will not spend my hard earned money on titles that employ this rediculous practice. It is obsurbed and should not be happening, are the studios trying to derail Blu-ray or just catering to a small group of consumers who care nothing about how movies should look?
Unfortunately...
the studio's are just catering to a large group of consumers who care nothing about how film should look.

I feel you pain!



Movies are: "The Greatest Artform".
HD should be for EVERYONE!
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Old 07-14-2008, 10:49 AM   #40 of 40
Cassy_w
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Re: "The eager gaze of the uninitiated"


A large group who will buy regardless of what it looks like! That is the difference. They buy, period. They just do. They see the film on the shelf at Best Buy and they snag it. It's that simple.

So there is no reason to ruin how films look because of them.



Death to PG-13! And now death to DVNR too!!
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