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FEATURES: Holiday Gift Guide 3D tech comes home
  • Matt
  • Member Since Jan 17th, 2007
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Why won't you be happy until every theater is in digital and 3D? Do you hate movies? Do you really believe that digital is better, and that 3-D films (like Land of the Lost) are revolutionizing cinema?
HC, I think you might be thinking of Robin Hood: Men in Tights. And I bet you anything that Moulin Rouge made more on DVD than both of those Robin Hoods combined. It had quite a following and was perfect for the medium.
You're right, for the most part. Most films are not edited in 2K, but in some smaller-res and highly compressed offline format. Even when they edit in HD, it's a very compressed DNxHD 36. What matters is not what they edit on but what their Digital Intermediary (DI) is on, and those are almost all 2k (I believe that's what you were talking about). Regardless of the capture format, every mainstream movie is color corrected digitally on 2K (very rarely 4K), and they make the film prints off of that very large digital file. Star Trek's DI was in 2K.
The studios don't really want to cater to your television. The whole reason that they created widescreen was to differentiate themselves from the experience at home. Why do you think that they're going hog wild with 3D now?
If the IMAX image were presented in its entirety on BD, it would have black bars on the left and right of an HDTV. It would look similar to watching SD TV or an old film on HDTV, only with higher resolution.

IMAX is shot on 1.43:1, which is very close to the 4:3 of a standard-def TV. They cropped the top and bottom of The Dark Knight IMAX scenes to fit into your 16:9 HDTVs on Blu-Ray, so, technically, there is information missing from the theatrical IMAX release. The 35mm scenes on Dark Knight had a wider aspect ratio (2.40:1), and are presented in their entirety on the BD disc (with slight letterboxing on the top and bottom).

As for the "IMAX" movies above, I'm not sure how they do the transfer. Anybody know?

Either way, IMAX will look better on BD than DVD, due to the increase in resolution and color information, and is probably your best bet if you want to watch it at home.
Who cares about this show anymore? In terms of being the quality show that it once was, the Simpsons has been off the air for quite some time.
And yet you know what LaserDisc is?
You're sure making all the right picks on formats.
It's a pretty high profile center in a city without much centralization. It's right next to The Grove (fancy, crowded mall), a popular farmer's market, and CBS Studios. Huge center of shopping and what not. A lot of companies in that particular building, too.
I haven't seen the figures, but I assume it has to do with the massive space it takes for the picture and HD audio tracks (which are less compressed than what you hear in theaters). Sylar, they do release a lot of BD50s (dual-layer). The original Casino Royale was BD50.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I'm looking for a pair of quality headphones that aren't seemingly made of glass. I'm an avid BMXer which causes me to frequently bash on any type of technology that joins me for my daily riding. I've been through the higher quality headsets in the Skullcandy line as these are supposed to be built for "abuse," which is laughable. I cant wear earbuds or canal buds, as my large ears seem to have a repelling property upon anything that sits in them. Wired or Bluetooth doesn't really matter, but I need something that can hold up to taking a few hits every now and again. I'm trying to keep 'em under $150. Thanks!"

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