Para pedir en Amazon.uk
https://www.amazon.co.uk/True-Lies-U...s%2C157&sr=8-1
Para pedir en Amazon.uk
https://www.amazon.co.uk/True-Lies-U...s%2C157&sr=8-1
IMAGEN ...............LG OLED 65E6V UHD 4K (3D Pasivo)
VIDEO..................Oppo UDP-203 ; Panasonic DP-UB820EGK ;
Apple TV 4K ; PS5
AUDIO..................Altavoces Cambridge Audio Minx S215 7.1
RECEPTOR AV......Pioneer VSX-930-K
Twitter de Coleccionismo: https://twitter.com/samulimon
Avatar no se ha anunciado todavía para ningún país europeo, solo en USA, así que puede pasar cualquier cosa.
Cameron ha conseguido una cosa impresionante: el verdadero universo cinematográfico de Cameron. Todas las películas ahora se van a ver absolutamente igual.
https://slow.pics/c/r4XxgLp5
Las bandas negras del scope son azuladas no?
He visto un poco por encima la version digital de True Lies.
Es un completo desastre, aqui si se nota el DNR pero bien, ademas de verse todo absolutamente artificial, colores, brillo excesivamente alto, efecto manchado en los paneos y movimientos rapidos de camara...
Sigue sin ser una caso T2, pero tela. Peor que Titanic.
Última edición por Oscar1; 13/12/2023 a las 00:14
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Review de Bill Hunt de la edición digital en 4K de Apple. Ya, ya sé, no es el disco, pero de momento servirá para hacerse una idea. Cito el segmento donde habla de la imagen y el sonido.
True Lies was shot by cinematographer Russell Carpenter (Titanic, Avatar: The Way of Water) on 35 mm photochemical film (in Super-35 “common top” format, with Eastman EXR 50D 5245, EXR 200T 5293, EXR 500T 5296 stocks) using Arriflex 35 BL4, 35 IIC, and 35-III as well as Moviecam Compact cameras, along with Zeiss Standard Speed, Super Speed, and Cooke Varotal lenses. Visual effects were also filmed in VistaVision format. The film was then finished photochemically in the 2.39:1 aspect ratio for theaters (which included 35 mm anamorphic release prints, as well as 70 mm blow-ups). For its release on Ultra HD, Lightstorm, working with Park Road Post, has built a new 4K Digital Intermediate using recent 4K scans of the original camera negative (confirmed per Lightstorm). This footage has been “optimized” by Park Road’s proprietary deep-learning algorithms. Photochemical grain has been greatly reduced, though not eliminated entirely, while fine detail has been “enhanced” algorithmically. There are also occasional shots throughout the film that appear to have had a bit of old-school noise reduction applied, but it’s hard to be sure if it’s actual DNR or simply just that the Park Road process has been a little too heavy-handed in places. The image has also been graded for high dynamic range, with both Dolby Vision and HDR10 available.
The result is a 4K image of frequently striking clarity and impressive detail, but that occasionally looks oddly soft as well. Given that True Lies has never appeared on US Blu-ray—aside from an Italian import release and cable/streaming HD presentations—it would be very difficult to argue that this isn’t a massive improvement over past DVD and LaserDisc editions. But the film does look somewhat processed, and certainly more modern than mid-1990s vintage. There’s still light photochemical grain visible and plenty of fine image detail, save for occasional face shots that appear digitally-retouched. The palette is somewhat subdued, as it’s always been, yet the colors are well-saturated and accurate—and they’re downright bold during Helen’s attempted strip-tease seduction scene in the hotel, with golden firelight flickering in the background. Shadows are very good, with strongly-bright highlights. True Lies definitely doesn’t look perfect, and appears to have been more “optimized” than one would think necessary for an image sourced from 4K scans of original camera negative. Still, this is mostly a very good looking UHD image that I suspect most fans will appreciate, even as some (not unreasonably) take issue with the extent of the remastering.
The film’s English soundtrack is included in a new Dolby Atmos mix that features a bigger and more immersive soundstage than ever before. For most of the film, its atmospherics tend to be subtle, but once the action kicks in things start to get much more robust and dynamic. The height channels are used largely for overhead completion, but during the bridge chase and Harrier attack they add some discrete lift and directionality. Movement is smooth and natural, with firm LFE as the explosions erupt, and gunfire pings and whistles around the soundstage. Harry’s Harrier rescue of his daughter (say that three times fast) also benefits from the Atmos mix’s more liquid panning, though the sound of its Rolls-Royce Pegasus engines doesn’t have quite the bluster or bite you might be expecting. Dialogue remains clean and clear at all times, while full-sounding mids lend pleasing fidelity to the score by composer Brad Fiedel (Terminator, Terminator 2: Judgment Day). This is a strong sonic upgrade, but it will be interesting to see if the higher data rates on the physical 4K UHD version can improve upon it.
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Si en plena era UHD 2023 Hunt ya ha de tirar de recursos y argumentos del tipo: “it would be very difficult to argue that this isn’t a massive improvement over past DVD and LaserDisc editions”, pues esto es preocupante y apaga y vámonos.
Al final han hecho lo mismo que con Titanic aunque los resultados no sean exactamente los mismos (peras/manzanas) pero mismo tipo de trabajo, procesamiento, similares decisiones para películas del mismo director rodadas en celuloide de épocas similares, etc. “Tanto monta monta tanto Isabel como Fernando”
Última edición por deportista; 13/12/2023 a las 12:53
IMAGEN: Samsung OLED 77S93C (sí, sin Dolby Vision), Panasonic OLED 65HZ1000 y Reproductores UltraHD Panasonic UB9000 y Sony X700.
Cuando un analista tiene razón, pues tiene razón, y no queda mas que dársela.
Es lo mismo que si alguien comenta que el UHD de Terminator 2 es, innegablemente, mejor que cualquier grabación de Super8 apuntando a la pantalla mientras se reproduce en un VHS gastado, filtrado en blanco y negro, recodificado en DivX 3.0 con un bitrate de 4Kb/s y reproducido en reverso a través de un Cinexin...
A veces yo ya no sé si es sarcasmo lo que utilizan para con estas ediciones, o si son razonamientos sinceros y mínimamente meditados...
Peinabombillas
Del it. peinar, bombilla.
1. adj. Dícese de aquel hombre que realiza actividades absurdas o faltas de razonamiento.
2. adj. coloq. Dicho de una persona: Que se comporta de forma similar o que evoca al cineasta James Gunn.
Meditado y bien meditado, eligiendo cada palabra con toda la intención para poner el paño caliente y blanquearles lo que pueda. Lo que vulgarmente conocemos como te voy a “echar un cable” por la amistad que nos une.
IMAGEN: Samsung OLED 77S93C (sí, sin Dolby Vision), Panasonic OLED 65HZ1000 y Reproductores UltraHD Panasonic UB9000 y Sony X700.
en las redes sociales, ya estan con las mofas, dicen que van a cambiar la portada, para hacerla coincidir con la transferencia
" Quod in hac vita facimus, vocem aeternitate habet"
Ya tenemos comparativa:
https://caps-a-holic.com/c.php?d1=15...4&i=13&l=0&a=1
La de palos que le están dando a todas las películas de Camaeron (sí, a todas, incluida Titanic) en el foro de bluray.com es de campeonato. Menos mal que iban a ser lanzamientos de referencia.
IMAGEN: Samsung OLED 77S93C (sí, sin Dolby Vision), Panasonic OLED 65HZ1000 y Reproductores UltraHD Panasonic UB9000 y Sony X700.
Última edición por Oscar1; 14/12/2023 a las 00:29
Efectivamente, me parece todo mal, justo al contrario que os parece todo bien, como demuestran estos hilos.
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Comparativas, a ver qué os parece.
Hechas con el 2160p web-dl que pesa unos 25 gigas de pista de vídeo.
Las primeras son con el máster D-Theather, que era ya algo mejor que el DVD editado en su día.
https://slow.pics/c/ynlUoQUp
https://slow.pics/c/PwduJhTc
https://slow.pics/c/007FkM6w
Las segundas con el máster HD que Disney subió a su plataforma hace unos meses.
https://slow.pics/c/xhXpuQOH
https://slow.pics/c/W8Rn8EYZ
Twitter de Coleccionismo: https://twitter.com/samulimon