tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24904037.post5020538211133023235..comments2024-01-11T04:57:37.530-04:00Comments on The Furious D Show: Hollywood Babble On & On #888: 2 Random Drippings From My Brain PanFurious Dhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07934529688753875751noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24904037.post-29781492984861700682012-04-27T20:18:04.018-03:002012-04-27T20:18:04.018-03:00I've got a bad feeling about this at Ghost of ...<a href="http://www.ghostofaflea.com/archives/017632.html" rel="nofollow">I've got a bad feeling about this</a> at Ghost of a Flea has more.<br /><br /><i>Well today he screened 10 minutes of footage at CinemaCon in Las Vegas, and according to some, it sorta sucked. Because now the images are actually too crisp and clear, and it doesn’t look like a movie any more.</i><br /><br />Too high of a quality. HDTV was supposed to cause that problem for local TV News sets, which didn't look good in HQ. People who visited the sets in person were always surprised by how bad they look, dirty, old paint, etc.<br /><br />That's why the outdoors scenes would be okay, except for losing immersion in the detail.<br /><br />More at the link.McGee's Dirty Dingusnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24904037.post-40204477952669734472012-04-26T20:21:01.885-03:002012-04-26T20:21:01.885-03:00The strictly technical issues of faster framerate ...The strictly technical issues of faster framerate may not force video to look worse. <br /><br />More likely it's having to use 'faster' film that can work under the shorter exposure time forced by the quicker framerate. <br /><br />Better lighting to help accommodate the faster film may also come into it. <br /><br />What works in a brilliantly sunlit outdoors setting may not work indoors if the lighting technicians don't have the experience suitable for the new approach.<br /><br />The <i>I, Claudius</i> example, on the other hand, seems to demonstrate the effects of higher definition video than the production was designed to display. Like watching an old low resolution DVD on an HDTV.McGee's Dirty Dingusnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24904037.post-28715145643819117912012-04-26T15:13:00.259-03:002012-04-26T15:13:00.259-03:00It all has to do with a phenomenon called "Pe...It all has to do with a phenomenon called "Persistence of Vision" which allows our brain to take a parade of still images coming through our eyes, and process them into moving images.<br /><br />Very complicated scientifical stuff.Furious Dhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07934529688753875751noreply@blogger.com