Brazil Takes Lead in All-Digital Cinema Projection 293
securitas writes "The CS Monitor's Andrew Downie reports that Brazil plans to open in May the world's largest digital movie theater network. About 100 theaters will use Sao Paulo-based Rain Networks' KinoCast digital theater DRM software. Rain based its system on Windows Media 9 software with MPEG-4 video compression. 'The MPEG-4 software can squeeze a feature film onto a file of just five gigabytes, 15 times smaller than the MPEG-2 technology presently used' at one-third the $150,000 cost. It takes 20 minutes to distribute a 90-minute film over a VPN and the system avoids the costs associated with transporting physical copies to areas largely inaccessible by road - it can cost up to $750,000 for 500 copies of a Matrix-type blockbuster to be distributed. Interestingly, in the affluent USA the fight between the 35,000 theater owners and Hollywood is about who will pay for cinemas to switch to digital projection. In December 2003 the Guardian published a story with more financial and technical details of the KinoCast digital cinema system."
WMP9 (Score:4, Funny)
"Man, independant films are so weird. I totally didn't understand that one part where right in the middle of the car chase, it showed that big blue screen. What was all that weird text on it, the credits?"
Re:WMP9 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:WMP9 (Score:2)
Which twit didn't think of that one?
Yes but (Score:4, Insightful)
I have a feeling that if some area is inaccessible by road, it's not likely to have DSL or fiber running to it either. So they'd still have to bring the hard-disks (or whatever media) by hand.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Yes but (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Yes but (Score:5, Insightful)
Satellites, or point-to-point radio-systems come to mind.
The experience in India. (Score:5, Insightful)
The future (Score:3, Interesting)
There have been several instances over the years where the studios lost the original film masters and had to resort to using 35mm prints that were sent out to the theaters to restore parts of the film for home video release. (The Wickerman comes to mind as an example) If digital distibution becomes so prevalent that everything is distributed on recycled HDDs or via network I do hope the studios deem it important to keep off-site backups.
Re:Yes but (Score:5, Informative)
If you RTA, you could see that they use satellite (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Yes but (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yes but (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yes but (Score:2, Interesting)
That's not why they won't be using the digital theater though. Seriously, who's going to be able to afford the $50,000 equipment and DSL connections when they don't have accessible roads. Obviously, this won't be an affluent area. How do the theater owners actually plan on making money off this?
And as for the $15
Man, you are completely out of your mind. (Score:5, Interesting)
Do you have any idea how much costs a current, analog projection gear?
... and DSL connections
if you had RTFA you would know the connection is satellite-based.
... when they don't have accessible roads.
what the fsck? the digital gear is way lighter, and it can be transported by air, water... now, if you were talking about DSL/fiber...
... Obviously, this won't be an affluent area.
? this has absolutely no logic. BR is a country bigger than continental US. don't you think we have big cities in less-acessible places (p.ex. Manaus)and to which digitally sending the movie is way cheaper?
... How do the theater owners actually plan on making money off this?
Hmmm... it's better than an analog refit to an old theater? it's cheaper in the long run, and we can keep fees low (in a middle-sized town, a movie fee is, like U$1-U$2 down here).
And, something you prolly don't know, cinema is in in BR lately, and many mid-sized and small towns are getting new/refitted movie theaters...
... And as for the $1500 cost of physical film, that's a moot point. Places like that will likely get it 3-6 months and 3rd or 4th-hand after the film has been circulated throughout other countries.
Only now they can get the film as fast as the other places, because there is not only one copy that has to be transported!!
Brasil - movie prices (US$) (Score:3, Informative)
mid-sized (lt 1M ppl) = $1.75 (R$ 5)
my town (3rd largest, 4Mppl) =
downtown theaters -- $2 = R$ 6
mall multiplex, mon-fri -- $2.25 = R$ 8
mall multiplex, sat-dom -- $3-5.25 = R$ 12-16
approximate math, of course. yes, I can multiply.
Roads (Score:3, Interesting)
Bout time (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Bout time (Score:3, Funny)
You see those black ovals? Cigarette burns.
For that matter, it'd be harder to splice in single frames of hard core pronography as well.
Re:Bout time (Score:2)
Yeah, especially with the DRM and all. Now who wants to work at the cinema?
Re:Bout time (Score:5, Informative)
Ahh....No. Those are Changeover cues. Two of them at the end of each 20-minute reel, the first separated by eight seconds from the second, and the second about 3/4 of a second from the last frame. Gives projectionists using older equipment the signal to startup the incoming projector with the light path blocked, then, at the second cue, instantaneously switch image and sound from one projector to the other for the next reel. It's the way it was done up util about the 80s or so. Now most cinemas have only one machine and a film transport system called a platter that handles the entire print. The problem is that one operator now handles an entire huge multiplex and is running from one booth to another, so he or she can't be around to catch any problems. Coupled to the fact most of these operators couldn't count their balls/boobs and get the same number twice, and you have the reason that 35mm projection is often so bad, especially in smaller cinemas.
There are still many two-projector installations in the United States and Canada. I ran just about every one of them in Toronto in the 80s and 90s, and I still miss doing so to this day. Forget digital projection and stick with 35 and 70mm film. Just put properly-trained projectionists behind the equipment and the experience the movie-goer will get will be increased by an order of magnitude.
Re:It was a _Fight Club_ reference, actually (Score:3, Interesting)
As to splicing single frames of pr0n into features, it's a nice urban legend but in reality anybody even casually watching will notice the frame. Go back to the changeover cues we were just talking about -- each of the two cues is printed on 4 frames, or about 1/6th of a seco
Re:Bout time (Score:2, Insightful)
Right, we trade scratched prints to squealing and chirping sound and smudged, blocky, pixelated video...
One of the most important laws of technology is that It's Never Perfect. =)
Re:Bout time (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe if the chains hired back some real projectionists who can put on a good show without scratching the print to ratshit after 3 passes you would have your wish. Expert film handlers and a good 35mm print (or dare I suggest it -- 70mm) will beat the optical quality of ANY digital projection system currently in use or likely to come down the pike in the next decade.
If you ever get the opportunity to do so, carefully examine a 35mm print and a digital release of the same title. Look for the "swirling snow" digital artifacts in any light-coloured scenes (like snow or sandscapes); blocky shadows; colour that just doesn't look "right."
It's still possible to put together a booth of older equipment that will put on a beautiful show for about $15,000 or less -- I've seen it done for under $8,000. No THX for that money, but good optical stereo, a nice, bright image and solid, mechanically-reliable hardware. Just add in a relatively-cheap DTS player and you're off to the races.
Now consider that just a single Digital projector will cost, conservatively, $150,000. That's without the B-chain sound hardware (amps, wiring, speakers, etc). Out of a $10 ticket price, the exhibitor MAY see $1 to $1.50 per ticket if they're lucky. Most couldn't increase the concession prices any higher without having a full-time loan officer on site, so that's not much of an option either.
The problem is that Digital is still very much the buzzword-du-jour. It's still not ready for prime-time, but idiot movie-goers are prepared to sit through a vastly inferior presentation (unless a 35mm projectionbaboon screws up) just to say "I saw it in Digital. Duh."
Re:Bout time (Score:3, Interesting)
I live in Marilia (about 400Km from Sao Paulo City), a city with a population of 200.000 and some movies takes 2 or 3 months to get here. Digital Cinema will short this waiting time.
24fps vs. blocky video (Score:4, Insightful)
Now take digital with its ability to blit high resolution graphics at very high framerates compared to traditional film. As good as these systems are, the loss in resolution due to compression is a killer. Though we may have all been agog at the CG used in the Star Wars prequels as well as the LoTR trilogy, much of the compression artifacts were still clearly visible. I don't think digital is ready for widespread usage yet. MHO, of course.
In Brazil, it fascinates me that there are movie theaters where there are no roads.
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:5, Informative)
tv scans every second line so 60hz is only 30 fps
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:3, Informative)
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:4, Informative)
TV does not have 60 fps. It just projects the image 60 times per second. This marks a fundamental difference between TV and cimema projection:
* Cinemas project *the entire image* during the whole frame-time. The small blacks during image shifts are taken care of by your eyes (ever wondered why you do not see blackness when you blink normally?)
* TV only projects a very small part of the image at the same time, and relies on afterglow of the projected area to make the image appear. By increasing the rate of the electron bundle, you get a more consistent brightness (less afterglow needed) and your image perception will improve.
Your eyes are only capable of seeing 20-25 fps. This is why you do not see fluorescent links blink on and off. For this reason you will not notice when cimema projection will increase speed from 25-60 fps.
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:2, Informative)
In moving pictures the difference is quite clear as well. Being a demoscene kind of person I can asure you that I can tell the difference if say a tunnel is running at 35 or 70 fps.
Also Television is effectively 50 fps, as a single interlaced image contains two points in time.
The next time you watch a movie in a the
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:4, Interesting)
20-25fps are sufficient with motion blur, which naturally occurs on motion film with long exposures. Film can start looking jittery when filmed in very bright outdoor scenes.
60fps on computer games can look jittery because there is no exposure. It's just a rendered frame at that exact instant in time, and because of this your eyes can pick up on the sudden changes between frames. The effect is called temporal aliasing.
Adding a motion blur, or simply blending with the previous frame can smooth out this affect.
This generally should not be a problem with film images projected digitally.
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:4, Funny)
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:3, Insightful)
you are so wrong.
First off watching a film that WAS shot at 60Fps looks and "feels" different. the surreal feeling from the lack of temporal information that 24p that film has is no longer there. 60p has much more temporal information and therefore feels more real, things look crisper due to the major
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:2)
No, they blink out once or twice per frame so each frame is shown 2 or 3 times over.
Normal CRTs rely on persistence of vision, the same as cinema projectors. The image on the screen fades very quickly. It is possible to make CRTs which fade slowly but this is generally undesirable since it results in a kind
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope you realize that sentence reads like a TV only works at 1 fps, this is wrong of course.
Alright, everybody seems confused about how TVs work. Well let me start by saying, yes, TVs do operate at 60 fps. You are getting 60 distinct frames of animation per second on a TV. But before you hit that reply button to tell me I'm wrong, keep reading.
TV's only have enough bandwidth to interpret 30 frames per second at 720 by 480 res
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:4, Interesting)
I suppose they were thinking about distribution to, say, Manaus, which is a big city in the middle of the Amazon. There are additional delivery costs either by air or by water. A digital delivery scheme would be faster and cheaper.
Nobody is building theaters where there is no basic infrastructure. There are just natural obstacles to be overcome, like the size of the country and the remoteness of some highly populated areas with good infrastructure.
This is exactly like the US. You can hire a plane to deliver your movies, or you can put bits down a backbone. Guess which is becoming increasingly more attractive.
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:3, Informative)
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:2, Informative)
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:2, Informative)
When it comes to IMAX, it's another story...
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:2)
* Believe me, I've seen the arguments many, many times and there's a strong body of opinion in favour of slow 35mm (=100ASA) over digital.
* The complaint is largely centred around compression, anyway. They're doing a lot to get a full movie down to 5GB.
Re:24fps vs. blocky video (Score:2, Informative)
The funny thing is that, since movies are taped 24 fps, movies on tv are often simply transmitting the 24 fps as 25 fps. A movie with a length of 1:40 will therefore only last 1:36 on tv. Of course, commercials stretch this to 2:30...
Since I haven't watched any tv in the last 10 years, I don't know if this still happens with the rise of digital technology, but I have checked this a couple of times when I still spent 2 hours per night on the couch in front of the bo
It's not really unexpected... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:It's not really unexpected... (Score:2, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:It's not really unexpected... (Score:2)
Yes, you can. Your analogy is inapposite because this isn't an open distribution system, where the theaters might have to decode some random piece of video sent to them by some random person - they know exactly what they
Re:It's not really unexpected... (Score:3, Informative)
Fast VPN.. (Score:5, Informative)
Compare: HDTV is 20 megabits per second (Score:2)
Episode III NOT coming to any theaters near you (Score:5, Insightful)
Episode III, not coming to any theaters near you anytime soon. How many will just go to see it even if they know it's bad when they can't even drop down to their local theater? Nobody will inconvinience themselves for a movie who's draw is mainly "I just want to see how the thingends already". Of course maybe it won't be bad, but what are the odds of that?
Re:Episode III NOT coming to any theaters near you (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Episode III NOT coming to any theaters near you (Score:2)
Re:Episode III NOT coming to any theaters near you (Score:2, Funny)
"I just want to see how the thingends already"
I believe the ending to Episode III is available on DVD already. It's called Episode IV - A New Hope.
DRM? psst (Score:5, Interesting)
Can someone comment on the security and encryption of WMV9?
Re:DRM? psst (Score:2, Interesting)
For the movie industry to start issuing DivX copies of its films may prove regrettable
Re:DRM? psst (Score:3, Informative)
Re:DRM? psst (Score:2)
Does anyone know of a movie-capturing software ?
Re:DRM? psst (Score:2)
I really have to disagree on this one.
It believe it's easier to decrypt an allready compressed stream, than to capture, recompress and write to disk cinema-class high-definition video-content.
If the this is anything like say HDTV (to be modest) real-time compression will be pretty impossible in any reasonable format with any available standard-hardware. Even the less the ability to write the data to disk at the speed
Re:DRM? psst (Score:3, Funny)
Wait for the source code to leak, heh
Re:DRM? (Score:3, Informative)
There are tools out there to strip the protection from WMV9 audio files, unf**k.exe and one other I can't remember right now. However
Costs (Score:5, Interesting)
Prints wear out, which is why the image gets worse over time, however the resolution of 35mm is much greater than that of most digital systems that I know of.
DVD and DiVX look Awful on a big screen as you can see the artifacts on the system. This asks the question how it can be suitable for the large cinema screens.
Also converting a cinema to digital, while still having the ability to show film is going to be expensive. So who should pay the cinema, or the company that is saving millions on costs.
Another interesting point is do the distributers and films companies apporvie of the system?
If not it will die on it's feet before it even starts.
Call this a biased opinion from somebody who maintains windows servers (The cinema is in my spare time) but I can't see it being that long before the MS DRM (or any other system for that matter) is broken.
If this happens then all releases will go back to film as piracy is such a concern.
Digital can match 35mm - look at Star Wars (Score:3, Interesting)
That's why they aren't talking about DVD/DiVX but rather much higher resolutions. The new Star Wars films were shot entirely on digital and then converted to 35mm for projection, and I didn't hear people complaining about the low resolution.
Indeed, digital projection is likely to be better in most cases due to the fact that the film will not be sc
Artifacts and resolution - depends on bit rate (Score:5, Informative)
MPEG-2 is a lossy codec also, and I can't see any artifacts (e.g. blockiness, etc. - as opposed to limited resolution) with a well-mastered, high bitrate DVD (and that's on a 150" projected screen). It's only on the badly mastered/low bitrate DVDs that artifacts become apparent. I can generally see more in the way of artifacts in most 35mm films (poor Nth generation copies, burn-outs, scratches, etc.)
The resolution (and maximum bitrate) of DVD is pre-defined (and I was taking his reference to DiVX to mean 'at normal resolutions'). In cinema-type systems they are talking about a higher resolution picture: although Raincast don't give out resolution details, here's an example of a 3840x2480 [ntt.co.jp] system described as superior to 35mm.
Raincast's system appears to be high-resolution MPEG-4/WMA running at slightly higher than normal DVD (MPEG-2) bitrates (but with a more efficient codec). While it may not be good 35mm quality, it is likely more than usable, especially for hard to reach locales that otherwise might not have a cinema at all.
Re:Costs (Score:2)
With all due respect, the words "like hell you will" spring immediately to mind.
It's just another type of lock-in and the only people going to make bank off it is Microsoft and whomever they bought off to cook something like this up.
Re:Costs (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course the crappy screener on 320*240 won't be that fantastic on imax, but what about 10000x10000 pixels with a good compression ratio ? (or better)
That's something that i've been wondering, why not use comrpession to remove unvisible information while using the added bandwith / capacity for increased quality ? (example: 1hour of 96khz 48 bits audio on a CD would be great to hear - better than an uncompressed CD i'd think)
Besides, is it WM9 or MPEG4 ? I thought the chosen MPEG4 standard container was qt)
Re:Costs (Score:2)
That's what it does. "Psycho-visual" and "psycho-acoustic" modelling removes stuff that you can't really see or hear respectively, that's what MPEG compression schemes are all about! Any lossy format has to remove something from the data stream.
Re:Costs (Score:2)
Because there's no black market in pirating analog movies now, certainly.
(The comment's meant only to be ironic, I agree with you essentially.)
Digital projection is clearer than film (Score:3, Interesting)
Distribution system (Score:5, Funny)
The distribution system used by Rain Networks is available for free here... [kazaa.com]
Bit rate (Score:5, Informative)
That's only a little past the bit rate of the average DVD. Sure MPEG-4 is more efficient than MPEG-2 but when you take into account the high definition resolution (1280x960 or higher) there are sure to be visible artefacts.
Re:Bit rate (Score:3, Interesting)
MPEG-4 is more efficient at low bitrates than MPEG-2/1. I am not sure that MPEG-4 encoding is even capable of reaching 7.5 Mbps - the maximum I have seen for DivX movies is around 2 Mbps with the minimum quantiser used for all frames. For high bitrates I believe MPEG-2 is actually better, so I am not sure why they propose MPEG-4 for this purpose.
K
Re:Bit rate (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Bit rate (Score:3, Informative)
DivX: One MPEG4-implementation
MPEG4: A video-compression spesification
Just because DivX doesn't provide higher rates than 2Mbps, doesn't mean MPEG4 doesn't. And to be honest, I think this restriction only applies to DivX3.11 and older versions.
If you check out XviD, I'm pretty sure you can specify any bitrate, even if i
Lack of Public Roads (Score:3, Interesting)
data on disc is about the smallest thing you can imaginable. there is no place on earth with a digital projector to which such a disc can not be delivered along with whatever other items come in to the outside world. no exceptions.
at this particular state in time, should we really be cheering technologies that, however impressive the compression, actually deliver a lesser qualtiy image? how long will it take for the march of progress to make 5gb vs whatever the normal standard is seem as out of date as formatting 1.44mb floppy discs to 1.6mb or whatever that trick is that we used to play was..
Don't read too much into it... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Don't read too much into it... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is cool (Score:3, Funny)
Cool. Now where can I download this movie ?
Windows Media is Not MPEG-4 (Score:5, Informative)
Envivio used to offer a MPEG-4 plug in for WM, but no more (or at least not for free). [envivio.com]
I wish people would not perpetuate this confusion.
Goodbye Movie Theater (Score:3, Interesting)
It's all about costs (Score:4, Interesting)
Who will pay in US? (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm...ultimately the customers will.
piracy (Score:4, Insightful)
Look at the ready availability of photocopiers, scanners, printers and the like. And look what's on offer at your local W.H.Smith, or Waterstones, or any independent local newsagent, or remainder store.
Now ask yourself "why don't newspapers, magazines and books have a piracy problem, with all these copiers and so forth out there?"
Whatever the Printed Word industry has done to protect itself from "piracy", the music and movie industries have to do the same thing to protect themselves from the same threat.
Re:piracy (Score:5, Insightful)
Several reasons:
- Just how long would it take you to photocopy Harry Potter and how good of a copy could you make without destroying the book in the process.
- If you were to take the time to scan it, who would want to bother to print it out since the cost of the paper/toner would probably end up being more than the original book.
- Paper products have a long history and people are accustomed to their "interface" (i.e. I can take it on the bus or in the bathroom or in bed, I can fold it up, throw it in my bag, and I'm only out $5.95 (.50cents for a paper) if I lose it).
- With video and audio, EXACT reproductions can be made with a single mouse click.
- The nature in which their distributed lends themselves to easy reproduction (DRM efforts not withstanding).
Whatever the Printed Word industry has done to protect itself from "piracy", the music and movie industries have to do the same thing to protect themselves from the same threat.
You can't compare the two. Different mediums that came at different times. Just like 30 years ago, film piracy was no big deal. Before cassette tapes, audio piracy wasn't a big deal. Had ebooks taken off, then the "printed" people would be stressing out about piracy as well. Just so happens the preferred distribution media is just some damn inconvenient to reproduce.
Re:piracy (Score:2)
Actually, they do. (Score:2)
If they like it, they sometimes buy the dead tree version.
More Approximations (Score:2, Insightful)
Approximation has it's place, but at this bit rate quality anywhere near 35mm prints is nye impossible. Approximati
Me thinks you are missing the point (Score:2)
We're not talking about the US where digital is pushed as a "superior format" to that of film. When we go do digital movie houses, we expect quality that exceeds that of "regular" 35mm. That the theatre owner saved some bucks by having the film downloaded is irrelevant to us, and it doesn't mean that my 12plex is going to get movies that it wouldn't normally otherwise. NOW Brasil on the other hand, is
A correction to CS Monitor's story... (Score:2)
Inaccessible by road? (Score:2)
Hey, wait a minute... There are pure digital megaplexes with internet connectivity that allows 5G in 20M (what's that 700kbps?), but you can't get there by road??? Seems odd, no? Can someone expand on that point? (Or maybe I should break tradition, and RTFA... Nahhhhh, I want to fit in here.)
Digital Projection = End of Regional Encoding? (Score:2, Interesting)
The f
Re:Digital Projection = End of Regional Encoding? (Score:2)
Some info on how the different formats compare (Score:3, Informative)
Not to mention... (Score:3, Insightful)
Sometimes less money leads to more simple and viable solutions. US should take a look on what is going on below equator and maybe save lot's of money using solutions already tested. Just't becouse it was done here it doesn't mean it's not worth a look.
Profits, Profits, and more Profits (Score:3)
Sarcasm aside, once the new digital systems are in place, even with maintenance costs, total overhead costs should drop. I'm sure that the studios will make sure that they don't pass on that benefit to consumers. Instead they will pad their own pockets and those stars on the $20m+/movie list. They could spend the savings on hiring some new writers who have some original ideas. Just a thought...
Amigori
That will be crap (Score:3)
(2) design wireless networking for 10/54Mbs home video transmission (3) HD mode development for ATI Xilleon, and other projects).
The effective data rate for this "theater" is the same as digital SD television -- not even HD.
If the compression is THAT much better, I would have heard about it... and I haven't.
They won't be able to blow this up to a big theater screen (unless its filtered to hell). It's not gonna look good. Of course, we *could* be talking about a bad quality small theater screen...
So this is a big yawn. Worse -- they DO have the intrastructure needed to move 30Mps. The just want to, what, cut costs? Give 'em at LEAST HD resolutions (36Mbps).
And, if the compression is THAT GOOD (6 to 10 times better than current) -- there are other applications we would have seen it in first -- high end cam-corders, and (at least) a proposal for a DVD replacement format COMPLETELY COMPATIBLE with existing DVD technology (HD DVDs would be possible, with a blue laser!).
So this is bunch of hooey.
Thanks for you time; I needed to vent.
Ratboy.
Re:How will they get the movies? (Score:3, Insightful)
The majors are resistant to MPeg4 because since it is cheaper, uses smaller files and is easier to manipulate, the risk of piracy is seen as greater. For the time being, KinoCast machines will only be able to project independent and Brazilian movies, where there is less fear of piracy.