Best (and Worst) High-Def Discs of 2006 173
An anonymous reader writes "High-Def Digest has released their first annual 'Best (and Worst) of the Year' list of movies released on HD DVD and/or Blu-ray. Not surprisingly, the 'best' list is heavy on superheroes. Superman, Batman, and the Hulk all made the list. Not a bad cheat sheet for those of us with a Blu-ray capable PS3 or an XBox 360 HD DVD add-on on our Christmas lists."
I know this'll burn karma... (Score:4, Interesting)
After all, what good is having a 360 HD drive when you're only going to be watching the stuff at 720p or 1080i anyhow?
Anyone?
Re:I know this'll burn karma... (Score:5, Informative)
When talking about high def tv's, you're mostly talking about progressive displays (plasma, lcd, dlp, lcos, etc...) and in the US those displays are running at 60hz or 60 frames per second. Movies on the other hand are shot and encoded at 24fps. Now both an hd-dvd player and a blu-ray player, whether by component, dvi or hdmi are transmitting data to your tv at 60 fps. 1080i sends half the image on cycle 1 and half the image on cycle 2, your tv deinterlaces the image fields and shows you a progressive image for 2 frames. 1080p on the other hand sends the whole image on cycle 1, and nothing on cycle 2, and shows the progressive image for 2 frames as well. When you put down $1000 for a 1080p player, you've just paid $500 extra for a marketing term and the belief that movies will ever be shot at 60fps in the forseeable future.
Alot of people will probably chime in and start screaming about interlace artifacts right now. The only way you get interlace artifacts on a progressive tv, is if the source material was shot as interlaced, for example http://thewebfairy.com/911/presentation/artifact.
Re:I know this'll burn karma... (Score:4, Informative)
Except that some TVs can output in 1080p/24. So they can show the movie at the same frame rate as it appeared in the cinema. Getting a player to output in that is another matter. The PS3 can't (at the moment), but allegedly a firmware patch will add that support (see here [beyond3d.com] for details).
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The PS3, however, has one glaring problem as an hi-def media player - it can't output in 720p, which is the max resolution of many of the sets that are out there now. 1080p content hasn't been available for long. My PS3 was the #1 factor in my deciding to go with HD-DVD instead of Blueray; I have thousands of dollars invested in a 720p projection system, and the PS3 mashes all Blueray content down to 480p at best. The "bargain" you think you're getting for a game console plus Blueray player at $600 or so i
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No, the deinterlacer is trying to reassemble the separate fields of an interlaced image to a frame. To do this, is has to guess where the 2:3 cadence falls, and detect
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Re:I know this'll burn karma... (Score:5, Informative)
An example would be if in one frame of a 30 FPS source, my hand is on the left side of your screen. My hand moves so quickly to the right so that in the next frame it appears on the right side of the screen. So one frame has my hand at the left, then the very next has my hand at the right. Even if you view it at 100000 FPS (impossible, I know, but stay with me) there would be 50000 frames showing my hand at the left, followed by 50000 frames with my hand at the right. Even though you raise the FPS, there are still no frames that exist with my hand anywhere in between left and right. Unless 60 FPS TVs are able to interpolate between the two, there's just nothing available to show during the 'extra' frame so it stays the same.
When it comes down to it, a movie is still a finite amount of pictures shown in rapid succession (mainly 30 of them per second). Even though a TV can be capable of displaying twice that many in a second, it's not capable of 'making stuff up' to show you every other frame. So I guess I'm trying to say its the content, not the TV that determines the 'smoothness'.
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Secondly, when you make 24p to 60i you get as follows (1/12th of a second):
1A 2A
1B 2B
to
1A 1A 2A 2A 2A
1B 1B 1B 2B 2B
You actually send half of these in 60i, but that's the result. See the interlaced frame? Each frame gets 5 half-frames, but you can't split that evenly. You could give one frame 4 half-frames and the other 6, but that'd lead to stuttering. H
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you're absolutely right about showing low frame rate films... but I wouldn't be so sure about films NOT going to 60FPS in the future. Movie frame rates are low because back on the old film reels the lower the framerate
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Really? Can you name a game doing so? i was under the impression that ps3 developers were shooting for 720p because of the FPS hit they took at 1080P.
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Re:I know this'll burn karma... (Score:5, Informative)
Even if your TV is 720P, you'll still see a difference between regular broadcast / DVD and HD discs. Some people (myself included) claim to see a difference between HD discs and HD broadcast; for me, this is mostly due to HD DVDs having none of the compression artifacts and color banding you find occasionally on your HD broadcast.
Will theaters ever change? (Score:2)
I long for the day when I can just buy a TV Set and not have to consider these technical arguments inside my head.
True but... (Score:2)
However I've found generally that a 1080p display will usually offer the full HD resolution, while there are many displays that accept a 1080i signal but the actual resolution is somewhat lower. Thus looking for a 1080P display can be good from a resolution standpoint.
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HDMI is the only way. Protected video path and all that DRM shit.
I think you can't watch even 1080i without HDMI.
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"I know this'll burn my karma..." What the fuck? Fuck off wanker! I hate you assholes who add a mention of karma in nonsensical posts just to get it modded somewhere. Is this post solely for karma whoring? No-one can't be as stupid as think you can get HD through composite. Atleast no-one who actually owns a HD set. So we have two options: 1) Clueless wanker who has too m
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2) The grandparent is strictly off-topic. Burning karma to get his questio
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I've been looking at my share of 1080p televisions, however, I noticed that most of the TVs that are 1080p but only accept a 1080i signal. Since I wouldn't mind having a TV that doubles as a
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Anyone?
Um, because it will still look an order of magnitude better than 480i?
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Sure it's chaotic and all, but it gets the job done
If that's the best, they're in trouble. (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:If that's the best, they're in trouble. (Score:4, Funny)
Batman Begins is back to the darkness, not quite Burton style, but very far from
Batman & Robin. I'm sure the original poster just got Batman titles confused..
Give him a notice for the record, and pull his geek license next time it happens.
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What good movies (other than Army of Darkness) were the
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If Matt Damon was doing something else, I apologize...because I COULDN'T SEE A GOD DAMN THING.
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And it's funny to see Ebert slam a film in the 70s/80s, then come back twenty years later and hail it as a 'Great Movie' when he realises everyone else liked it. The man's a fraud.
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But this isn't about quality of film, it's quality of transfer, and of the HD discs I've seen of either format, Hulk was probably the best overall; the picture is just jaw-droppingly good, with luminous colour and natural texture.
Second best I'd place Casablanca, and if you're going to call that shit, you can step outside.
Re:If that's the best, they're in trouble. (Score:5, Insightful)
Hulk was a Shakespearian, father-son conflict, tragedy shot comic book panel style. The only reason people thought it was awful was because they came wanting to see some piece of shit like Fantastic 4 and instead got a more thoughtful, artistic masterpiece. It was a highbrow movie about lowbrow subject matter.
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Personally, I was fairly disappointed by Hulk, because in trying to have its artistic cake and also trying to eat big CG-heavy action sequences, it fell between two stools. I thought most of the second hour could do with a serious trim, people who just wanted to see HULK SMASH!!! would want most of the first hour gone, and ultimately everyone lost. Oh well, at least he tried.
Mind you, I'm sure that some people would say the same about Batman
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I also liked how they actually took the time to set up charachters, as opposed to X-Men and Spider-Man which felt edited to the bone. Not one extra second in any scene in those two movies.
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Which is what really annoyed me about the film, I think - bits of it were just so dark I couldn't actually see what was going on any more.
But yes, having some time for characters really worked with Hulk. Unlike most of the Batman sequels, where they throw so many villains at it that no-one (least of all Bruce Wayne) gets enough cha
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Re:If that's the best, they're in trouble. (Score:5, Funny)
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Really? That doesn't bode well for other superhero movies then:
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Couldnt you think of a less-caustic way to tell people that books are better?
When I was younger I was really into comic books. I also read real books all the time, big thick ones with fancy words and all that. What does it all mean? Its means I liked comic books and I liked regular books. Now I just read regular books. If comic books and movies interest someone, what business is it of yours? Why do you think people will care that you consider books so sup
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No, it was a case of someone taking an action movie, and try to pretent it was serious. The end result was to watch everyone walk around for 2 hours, utterly depressed about everyone and everything, for no particular reason. As well as everyone making blindly stupid, and obviously horrible decisions, with no consistency, just to move the plot along.
It was esentially a really crappy Batman movie, trying to also be something
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It's a new mpaa way to fight piracy. Instead of concentrating on new copy protection and policing the internet they figure they will make movies so horriable that nobody would want to copy them. Guess what, its working.
Missing the point (Score:2)
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Wouldn't it have taken less time to rewrite "Batman Begins" than it did to write "forgive the caps, I'm copy 'n pasting)?
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Re:If that's the best, they're in trouble. (Score:4, Funny)
Never overestimate the loser potential of Anoracks (Score:2, Interesting)
This list seems to miss one crucial point: people watch movies for entertaiment. For the vast majority it's all about being told a good story, not studying the quality of the latest movig image to be projected onto a wall/into a box/whatever.
Imagine having a collection that included films like hulk, mission: impossible iii and superman returns (I refuse to capitalise the titles - they're that bad). i'd rather spend the time beatig myself about the head with a dead salmon.
The majority of films in this lis
Re:Never overestimate the loser potential of Anora (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Never overestimate the loser potential of Anora (Score:2)
Normal people wait for the pr
They all look the same... (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, please don't buy into HD, unless the DRM madness ends. A few extra pixels are not worth our rights, nor the damage to the open source community.
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Besides, I fully expect that you'll see a flood of DVD players capable of playing high definition DIVX / AVC content from a burnt DVD before long, with tools and rippers to extract them from the source material.
Re:They all look the same... (Score:4, Insightful)
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No matter how high the resolution (Score:4, Funny)
Where are the real classics that I would actually want to see in hi-def?
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Next up, and almost as good (the larger grain of the original print being pretty much about it) is The Searchers. Finish off an initial purchase run with Forbidden Planet, and you'll be very happy.
"High-Def Digest" (Score:1)
They might be good HD (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry, but I'd rather watch a good film with a good plot and good acting on VHS any day over a whizz-bang technical film with crappy pretty-boy/barbie-girl actors and a script written by a committee...
I'll pass on this one
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Spoken like someone without an HDTV.
When most people first get an HDTV set, they will watch anything in HD, no matter how inane, just for the visual quality. The wow-factor tends to wear off after 6-9 months, but just about everyone with an HDTV set still remembers those first few months where the only thing
Guilty! (Score:2)
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As for regular content, almost every show I watch is in HD these days [mikebabcock.ca] (scroll to the very bottom for the list). I don't watch many shows just for their being in HD, but going from 1080i
Re:They might be good HD (Score:4, Funny)
What has good plot and good acting got to do with making a good film?
The measure of a good film is how much money is spent on making it: especilly how much is spent on marketing.
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That said, many of these films, even though they are trite and in 5 years will seem dated, do appear to make every use of the technological innovation. Since the innovations are largely visual, the improvements are largely visual as well, which leads to the issue that money is spent on fx rather than writing dialog.
How could they screw up 'Fifth Element'? (Score:1, Interesting)
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Dang it!
I don't have an HD DVD player anyway, so am limited to watching it on a regular DVD player anyway. I hope the best format wins.
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I'm curious...what would the reaction be for material like The Sting, or The Dark Crystal, or Amadeus? Sure, there are films out there that certainly will be
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Sony basically botched its early releases on BluRay, one of which was "The Fifth Element". Across the board everyone was underwhelmed with the whole lot of first releases. Sony couldn't get anything but MPEG-2 working by release time (that is not true now, but it was true this summer), so they had to encode all the first BluRay discs with MPEG-2 at high bitrates. I've seen MPEG-2 in high definition and it can look great with a
What happened to movies? (Score:4, Insightful)
The worst movies in list are lacking in extra HD content. So what? Couldn't care less. The winning movies have all sorts of cool extra content, but it still doesn't make the movie good. I will never buy World Trade Centre, even if had best extras and good transfer.
Video quality and soundtrack are the only things I care about. Please remove the extras and put these in with higher quality.
looking for a few good movies (Score:1)
No Adam Sandler? (Score:3, Funny)
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HD DVD Advert (Score:5, Informative)
If you want some better lists to work form, the guys over at avsforum are a much better information source, if you ask me:
HD DVD Picture Quality Tiers List [avsforum.com]
Blu-Ray Picture Quality Tiers List [avsforum.com]
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Blu-ray does suck ass and will die. It is more restrictive, has more DRM, requires java virtual machines to be implemented on all players (ugggh), requires the current DVD manufacturing plants to do serious upgrades because the surface layer is much thinner and also requires a special hard coating to be applied, and in turn is more expensive. Sure, it can theoretically hold more data but I think that will really only make a big difference for people
Bah- people will buy because of the JVM (Score:2)
Heh it might help get the spose on board for Blu-Ray
I'm still not buying anything till I can rip to my notebook.
-A
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Betamax, ATRAC, ATRAC3 (knocked out by MP3), MemoryStick, MiniDisc, Sony Dynamic Digital Sound (knocked out by DTS), MultiMedia Compact Disc, SACD (also joi
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Have you heard of the Sony Rootkit? How about the bullshit lawsuits against Lik-Sang or Bleem? How about their viral marketing campaign "All I want for Xmas is a PSP"? How about the fictitious movie reviewer they created called David Manning who always gave glowing reviews for Sony subsidiary Columbia Pictures, while real critics gave the same movies extremely poor reviews?
Well, this is a tad overwrought. Don't you think that it would be a better argument for you to prove that Toshiba has a long track re
odd list (Score:2)
Waiting for winner. (Score:2)
Or those who might have burning hardware in their PCs... In my search of DVD burning/authoring software I found software by RocketDivision called Grab & Burn [rocketdivision.com] which claims it can, "Duplicate CD/DVD/Blu-Ray/HD-DVD media in 1:1 mode", and, "supports all types of optical storage media (including CD-R/RW, DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, BD-R/RE, HD-DVD-R/RW and DVD-RAM) as well as a wide variety of burning hardware", and best of
What? No Serenity? WTF? (Score:2)
HD had better be more than just Cinerama. (Score:3, Informative)
Cinerama was never more than a footnote, because it was only suited to spectacle, not to storytelling. Only two Cinerama features were made with a conventional storyline: "How the West was Won," and "The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm." The rest were pastiches of spectacle: travelogues, ride-film-like experiences, and so forth.
It bodes very ill for high-definition that most of the "best" films are special-effects sci-fi extravaganzas.
I'm glad to see they have Casablanca on their list, but it's not clear that they're saying the actual experience of watching the movie is any better than on DVD. They seems to like the many extras bundled in. Is Rick more world-weary in high-definition? Is Ilsa lovelier? Do the heartrending scenes rend your heart any more? I haven't seen it... but I doubt it.
I like seeing superheros hurtle through space and things blow up as much as the next guy, but these are not enough to carry an expensive video format.
How, exactly, is high-definition going to help directors evoke emotion and tell a story?
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And yes, the way the light catches Ilsa's hair is pretty damn lovely, since you ask.
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There ARE movies that need/use HD... just not many (Score:2)
I loved it. It blew me away. I thought it was a great film. In many scenes, you had some huge spacecraft moving slowly past you,
Showscan (Score:2)
Temporal resolution is as important as spatial resolution, and if I recall correctly Edison or Dickson actually said in so in essence that chose 16 fps for economic reasons--it was the slowest frame rate that was tolerable. 24 fps is way too slow. Even
Summary (Score:2)
HD-DVD: 6
Blu-Ray: 1
Both: 3
Worst
HD-DVD: 1
Blu-Ray: 3
Both: 1
It appears that most in the 'Best' category use VC-1 while most in the 'Worst' category use MPEG-2.
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There's a lot of knockers on here because hollywood and its respective industries spend too much time developing better visual and audio reproduction technologies when they make no more movies worth reproducing. You show me the most crystal clear version of some comic book knockoff/video game knockoff/remake and I'll show you one guy that is