All-Digital Star Wars Episode 1 Screening 125
DJ_Jose writes sent us a link to an
excellent article that talks about Lucasfilm's plans
to screen an All Digital Version of the Prequel
in june. The future of film is doesn't have any film
in it. Isn't that excellent?
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
You're joking, right? Always? In 20 years when you can store a terabyte on the head of a pin you think that film will be better? It's just a matter of time before digital storage outpaces the alternatives. Audio first, then video, then high-performance video.
Something I wonder about from time to time is that in X years it will be trivially inexpensive to build one of those voice-recorder gadgets that has a recording capacity greater than a human lifetime. Imagine storing everything you've ever heard in your entire life? Imagine if everyone did?
-Pez
Extreme lack of Dynamic Range (Score:1)
Going by the digital cameras we use now at school, even the analog ones are better. BetacamSP kicks the shit out of DigiBeta and DVCAM. The colours are flat, and there's very little depth to the image. Lots of this could be corrected by giving it a REAL lens, but none-the-less, the tech has a LONG way to go.
-shai
Excellent? (Score:1)
Ever heard of DVD? :P
Actually, that could solve your problem...dunno how much good LCD projectors are (about $10k US?) but that + DVD would make sense (possibly even some form of Divx *shudder*)
no it bloody isn't (Score:1)
Anyone remember the Arthur C. Clarke story about aliens rescuing one thing from Earth being destroyed - a film reel of "Steamboat Willie".
Excellent? (Score:1)
I doubt that the upgrades would cost that much really. Assuming the SAT equipment and RAID's cost each theatre $20,000 , the cost they pay for each movie would be lower, and in the long run, profits would boost
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
It will always be possible to transfer a digital copy to film at a higher resolution then a digital copy could be projected onto a screen. You only need to have one badass super mega expensive film recorder to transfer a digital copy to film. Due to economics, the digital projection systems in theaters will be lower quality. Film will always be better.
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
Storage/bandwidth won't be the bottleneck, display technology will be. Sure DLP and other digital projection will improve, but analog projection isn't standing still, look at imax. As technology improves, the resolution achievable with film will always be better than tiny mechanical mirrors. Maybe in the year 2020 DLP chips will be built at an insane resolution by nanites, but nanites could also be used to expose analog film.
Note that I am not saying that digital won't take over, (for various distribution related economic reasons), but it won't take over because it is of higher quality.
Yuck. (Score:1)
Moron (Score:1)
"Whhheeeeee. Something digital. I want it. It rules."
Whack!
Excellent? (Score:1)
Excellent? (Score:1)
This is just retarded. So only hi-tech AND subscribing theaters can get it, at least initially. Who's going to pay for the theater upgrades? What advantage would this offer either the theater OR the movie goer? There are less things to go wrong with a normal projector than a digital solution. The quality is better with film. Sorry, but I'm not convinced. AT ALL. Prove me wrong...
Good Point(s) (Score:1)
Facts Please? (Score:1)
Film can be stored offline. Where are you gonna stash all the backups? How much is it gonna cost, comparitively?
Good/Bad (Score:1)
Ludicrous! (Score:1)
About as many as in the original post of this same message.
Takes up more space? Than what?! A huge video serving computer with racks and racks of drives? A dedicated UPS and air conditioner? Rows of consoles? A satellite dish? Hmph.
HDTV better than film? Umm... That's crazy. Film has practically unlimited resolution.
Ain't nothing wrong with 24fps.
Which is cheaper? Already viewed film reels or backup tapes/drive cartridges? How much do multi-terabyte Jaz cartridges go for these days? ;> Now tell me which is cheaper to store. One that's already paid for, or one you have to pay for in addition?
Breaking in the projector and splicing... Okay, so instead, we train monkeys to operate complex video-on-demand computer equipment. Hmm, yeah, I see your point. Not.
Bulb intensity?! Put down the crack pipe... I don't know what trailer movie theaters you attend, but the ones out here in the real world are just fine...
35mm... Ummm. Where to begin. The only limit on film is the factor of enlargement/grain. Not so with digital - you have a FIXED resolution. It'll look just as shitty blown up three times as the 35mm, if not worse. Grain is normal - people are used to it. Pixelation is really obvious. Ever look at an IMAX theater? That's 70mm film. Looks DAMN good to me, dude.
Film hasn't changed... Er, yes it has. I take it you're not into photography or cinematography? It's gotten a LOT better. But otherwise, you're right, it hasn't changed - why should it? It's damned near perfect, visually.
This is 100% (Score:1)
Assumptions... (Score:1)
And for the record, I STILL have my vinyl, and I ain't ever giving it up!
Not About Trying It (Score:1)
Especially since they make digital projectors (Score:1)
Just up the res. (Score:1)
All digital is coming, all right. (Score:1)
For those who say that digital is too pixelatted and doesn't map colours right, I say "feh!". Our product stored images at 4096x3072, with ten bits of LOGARITHMIC colour per plane. We make scanners and recorders to move film to digits and digits to film with that sort of quality. I defy you to tell the difference between film and that sort of digital. Chances are, you've already seen a lot of film that went through that process somewhere along the way.
It's fine unless you live in Rochester, NY... (Score:1)
film rules! (Score:1)
Another link (Score:1)
"During a demonstration at ShoWest, with film and digital scenes projected side-by-side on a big screen, the only problem with digital appeared to
be color, with whites taking on a yellow hue, blues becoming purplish, and skin tones giving actresses a manequin-like complexion."
film rules! (Score:1)
no it bloody isn't (Score:1)
no no no no no no.
Film is:
1 durable
2 device independant
3 cross platform
4 has minimum machine spec requirements (light, lense)
100 years from now, people will find reels of film in archives and be able to play them. Even if there were no projectors left, it would be trivial to design one that could play old films.
100 years from now when they find an unknown storage device with some label on, they will chuck it.
It's the same as those people taking videos and not photographs (or worse, taking digital photos). In 50 years when there are no VHS players in common use, people will just chuck out their grandparents recorded lives, because they can't see what's on that dusty old tape in the attic. With photographs, you can tell in an instant what it is, and it requires no playback device.
More or less the same with celluloid film.
A digital future leaves no past for our grandchildren.
Yes, it bloody is! (Score:1)
1. Sure, we will have the technology to use VHS tapes for a long time, but that technology won't be available to most people. If you find a shoebox in the attic marked 'photos', you can open it up and see if the photos are worth keeping.
If you find an old tape marked 'holiday video', and the tape won't run on any equipment you or your friends have, you probably aren't going to bother keeping it.
2. It's not the software, it's the hardware. Sure, just because in 15 years everything is in MPEG-8 format, I'm sure we'll be able to see MPEG-1 movies. However, just 10 short years ago I was saving text (digitally) onto audio cassettes from my Commodore 64. Recovering data from those audio sets so that I can print it from my PC is going ot be REMARKABLY hard.
Sure, Disney will make sure its digital works stay stored the the very latest mediums. But what happens when some little company makes a great little film (yes, outside of the US small companies can make films), and in 20 years time they go bust. Their archives will sit there on some outdated format, until they become unusable.
Yes, it bloody is! (Score:1)
So true (Score:1)
The simple fact is that we experience life in Analog, not moderated through a digital sample that gets decoded back again.
The LP fanatics may sound kooky, but they are really onto something when they say that CDs can't really imitate the sound quality of an analog recording, and we won't be until DVD audio discs become available (which have 24 bit sampling, instead of the 16 bit sampling on CDs).
Now, actually, I've heard that the high-end digital film displays are said to be better than than even a film fresh out of the canister, but somehow I think we'll only get the low end stuff in theatres for the immediate future. Digital transmission and display only becomes a good imitation of film when the sample rate of the digital is so high that you can no longer notice it.
-Dean
We're not against the idea of digital itself (Score:1)
Premature adoption of a technology will result in being stuck with an inferior standard.
Digitalization is inherently _lossy_. It takes a digital "sample" of what appears and then reconstructs the image using the data available from the sample. Now, this is great for mass duplication, copying, and transmission over long distances for analog data whose quality isn't that important. However, when one is trying to duplicate real music and real scenes of the real world, you need a sampling rate high enough that the human eye and ear can't detect the "loss" involved by digitalization. And this is an extremely high sample rate.
And, let's face it, given the choice between the _right_ technology, and the trendy, buzzowrd-laden, but slightly inferior technology, which is going to be chosen, right?
However, I did hear that a group of people compared an HDTV movie projected onto a screen with a film projection movie that was fresh out of the cannister (ie, no stretching, scratching, or fading from the projector bulb), and the HDTV projection image won out hands down. So I have no doubt that digital movies will eventually be "all that". On the other hand, I suspect that digital movies _now_ will simply be a way for distributors and movie theatres to cut down on cost while giving us a product that simply isn't as great.
But, what the heck? I know that I'll probably head to the closest city to see the all-digital projected version of Episode One.
-Dean
''...designed to outclass today's 35-mm film.'' (Score:1)
Color photo's are no better.... (Score:1)
Only black and white (silver-gelatin) and Poloroids will survive that long.
Yes, it bloody is! (Score:1)
Are you trying to say that a 100 years from now, no one will be able to decode the data stream from a digital photo? You've got to be kidding me. Yes, VHS and other physical formats may have problems due to lack of hardware, but digital formats do not. Look at the fact that MP3 works on hard disk, removable disk, CD-ROM, streamed over a network . . . It doesn't matter because it's all just data. In the hundred years that pass from now till then, do you think that no one will make sure that their is software translation for the current DVD or other digital formats? We still build graphics software that opens the old 1 bit paint images, why would we abandon and be unable to decode other old forms of data. It just doesn't make sense.
No way... give me film. (Score:1)
The original Starwars was great because of the way they had to render those ships.. (i.e. made from models and glued together ).
An all digital rendering of those special effects would be "So realistic" it would suck.
I wonder what Kubrick would have said......
film is dead; distribution will rule (Score:1)
I work in a software house which makes software to be used in digital film production. I can't say more because I'm under NDA until the NAB show in Las vegas (plus, marketing is not my area of expertise
IMHO film is *dead* in the same way NTSC is dead - the old technology has been pushed as far as it can go and digital is almost ready for prime-time. This will be argued for years, but we've already seen digital take over audio (the CD, although they CD doesn't have quite the freq range of an LP...) and digital video cameras with [Apple] Firewire ports are becoming mainstream.
This is NOT 1280x1024! 4k resolution is the minimum, and 64-bit color is sweet. This can scale up for larger screens, and does NOT have to be projected -- 120 degree concave screens anyone? (years away of course..). Quality is fantastic I hear and unlike film will improve quickly.
Lastly, the BIGGEST reason for a studio to push digital... DISTRIBUTION. This opens the doors for a coordinated worldwide release, instead of US only releases and when sales curve off, shipping the reels overseas. This also lessens the effect of piracy -- there's less demand for bootleg showings of something everyone has already seen. The release delay or innaccessability of a hit film overseas is more than enough encouragement for some to pirate...
I'll miss film dropouts and dead moths like I will miss record pops and static electricity...
film is dead; distribution will rule (Score:1)
I agree developing qualifies for Nerdness (tm). I regret implying otherwise (hey, I was talking about the percieved "anti-digital").
Now one thing everyone seems to have overlooked is this is jst a PREVIEW. I heard they will consider ALL-DIGITAL for the second movie, but for the first we're just seeing a trial run.
Based on that information I don't see why the flat-earthers are getting all worked up like hysterical women in a B horror movie.
They're going to show THIS movie in the same stick-floor cinemas we are used to.
Still a long way to go... (Score:1)
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
>technology will be. Sure DLP and other digital
>projection will improve, but analog projection
>isn't standing still, look at imax.
I have looked at IMAX. Nice and pretty.
In fact, I looked at IMAX ten years ago.
See the problem?
- Darchmare
- Axis Mutatis, http://www.axismutatis.net
Excellent? (Score:1)
Star Wars on DVD (Score:1)
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
Do you think they'll use 4:4:4 color?
-jab
This could mean faster delivery to local cinemas.. (Score:1)
Maybe in a while we won't have to wait for the reels to arrive in scandinavia before we can get to see it here.
Did I hear "Terabytes"? this has got to be huge amounts of data?
Did I beat those stupid "First Post"ers?
Frank
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
So the very high quality trailer you see in the theater is made from a digital copy already!
Besides, tons of films already out also have entirely digital sequences. Any CGI shot is a digital copy. They look just fine, don't they?
The only difference this would make is that they would be projected directly from the digital copy, thus skipping the transfer to film step, which can only degrade quality.
film is dead; distribution will rule (Score:1)
Have you ever tried to develop film? Waaay more nerdy than pushing buttons on a computer.
--
No, it isn't (Score:1)
Look at it this way (Score:1)
Go take a photo class and you'll understand why digital sucks.
I'm not just a computer geek, I'm an art major as well.
No Subject Given (Score:1)
Am I the only one who gets extremely pissed off by cheap html-generators' question marks?
--
Paranoid
oh yes it is (Score:1)
We're looking at an improvement here. Think of all the digitally remastered home movies and the touched up re-releases of episodes III,IV, and V.
Amen! SXGA resolution is nowhere near 35 mm. (Score:1)
What will it take? (Score:1)
I haven't got time (or the facts and figures) to go through the math, but even without compression, I think that a
movie recorded onto DVDs would take up a lot less space and be cheaper to mass produce than the equivalent
in film reels ready for projection. This brings about my second question. How many DVD disks would it take to
record a movie at "film level" resolution?
4,000*2,000 * 4 * 24 * 60 * 120 =5,529,600,000,000
pixels color fps spm length total in bytes
5,529,600,000,000/3,000,000,000 = 1843 3 gig dvd
It's fine unless you live in Rochester, NY... (Score:1)
bnf
It's fine unless you live in Rochester, NY... (Score:1)
bnf
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
Nope =) (Score:1)
Of course I'm young, and I will eventually hit a French restaurant, and try a fabulous wine, buy a jacket for 200$ and lasts for 25 years, and listen to music because the composer was insane and suicidal, but for now I am easily placated and entertained.
AS
Digital movies look crappy enough on a 17" monitor (Score:1)
This could mean faster delivery to local cinemas.. (Score:1)
No. You just became one.
(don't take it personally -- I'm just in a shitty mood right now.)
--
- Sean
1280x1040 on a Big screen? No thanks! (Score:1)
I'd prefer to see the pristine film.... (Score:1)
I worked at a first-run theater for 3 years as a projectionist, and I can tell you those poor films get the s%!t beat out of them every single day. Scratches, soundtrack blurring, one time a projectionist cut out an entire scene for his "personal" viewing (remember Showgirls?). And the prints never get replaced, because the theater would have to enter into another contract lease on another print (in other words, they'd lose money, anywhere from $2 - $10,000 a week).
What I'm saying is digital films would have the benefit of being durable, if nothing else. And, as someone made the point earlier, when was the last time anyone on this board listened to an album because they wanted to hear the imperfections of the 12" record?
Darth Maul (Score:1)
film rules! (Score:1)
As a filmmaker, I feel the loss of celluloid
will be a terrible loss to the creative process
of bringing moving images to the screen in
an artistic way. I've worked in both video
and film, and film is the only way I prefer.
There's just something about holding the strip
of film, finding that exact frame on which you
want the match cut, and then splicing it
together. To me, 16mm will always be the best
way for me to make moving images.
I guess in a few years when digital projection
comes, I'll be in that crowd that cries for the
"old school" ways. Like some of us that still
listen to vinyl and love it.
Digital video still has a LONG way to go to match
not only the resolution of organic film, but
also the color range and intensity range.
The process of converting photons to an image
via a CCD chip is so completely different from
the exposing process of film that it'll be a
while before it looks good, in my humble
opinion. So, don't go arguing about 16 million
colors, and matching colors, because it's not
a data issue. It's the conversion at the CCD
chip that's just not right yet.
Just because it's digital doesn't mean it's
good. Just think back to VideoCD.
-Mike
1280x1040 on a Big screen? No thanks! (Score:1)
LP fanatics (Score:1)
And if 16-bit, 44.1Khz is adequate, why do today's good CD players have huge (e.g. 128x) oversampling?
By the way, HD CD players (DVD audio) offer 24-bit, 96Khz.. I want one..
Yes...film is good. (Score:1)
No, but I have projected 35mm slides shot on good film (e.g. Kodak Professional Ektachrome [kodak.com]) to well above that size.. And the grain wasn't all that noticeable. At any rate it was much better than the 1280x1000 or whatever they're showing Star Wars at.
This is why Real is doomed... (Score:1)
Seriously since MP3 (and MPEG 1/2) are formats for which there is source code out there to do encoding and decoding, it's less likely to die than formats which don't...
Excellent? (Score:1)
editing. Assuming they use firewire, this means anyone with a digital camera will be able to edit at home on their PC/Mac/SGI.
effects. one of the expensive parts about effects is getting the film transferred into a computer so you can put in all that nice CGI. Then you have to spit the composited shots back out onto another piece of film. Digital cuts both transfers out.
distribution. Digital will allow you to send movies all over for cheap. Much cheaper than printing a copy of your reel. This is not just limited to theaters, either. If you hook up a regular vcr, you can print dozens of copies off your digital master.
I long for the day when wannabe Robert Rodriguez's like me can make movies that easily.
So there.
Zagmar
plesantville (Score:1)
"never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of digital tapes cruising down the highway."
Zagmar
Ludicrous! (Score:1)
35mm... Ummm. Where to begin. The only limit on film is the factor of enlargement/grain. Not so with digital - you have a FIXED resolution. It'll look just as shitty blown up three times as the 35mm, if not worse. Grain is normal - people are used to it. Pixelation is really obvious. Ever look at an IMAX theater? That's 70mm film. Looks DAMN good to me, dude.
Of course, none of that matters. You only get the effects of 35mm when you show it on a big screen. Gone to a theater recently? They are all small screens, which is why "Clerks" looks as good as "Hamlet" (which was shot in 70mm.)
And I swear this is my last comment on this topic.
Ever watch "Boogie Nights?" This is the scene where it's December 31 1979, and Jack Horner is saying he'll never shoot on video because it looks and sounds like shite. All you filmophiles are Jack. The fact is, there will always be a small group of people who will pay more for better quality. But just like porn and music, regualar movies are gonna go digital. Think of it this way. You and a classmate both get out of your film majors at the same time. You both go to the same money people with the same quality script and demo reels. Now. Do the money people finance you, who insists on using film, preferably 35mm? Or do they finance your classmate, who'll shoot on a borrowed Canon digital camera? That's right. Because film is too damn expensive, for too little a jump in quality, to be justified.
Zagmar
Excellent? (Score:1)
plesantville (Score:1)
The only drawback is the amount of bandwidth needed. I suppose instead of beaming the movie to the theatre, they could ship DVDs to the theatres. In fact, they would probably copy the DVD data (which will probably be encrypted) to hard disk. I worked fixing computers at an amusement park, and the had a 3D simulator ride that ran off of computer projectors and had 20-odd disk array of drives to store all the data.
Film is bulky and heavy, but has (theoretically) infinite bandwidth. Digital is small and light, but bandwidth intensive. That is from basic Fourier analysis.
no it bloody isn't (Score:1)
In 100 years, I think it would be easier to write an MPEG decoder than to make an 8track player.
This could mean faster delivery to local cinemas.. (Score:1)
-Donwulff
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
The problem does not lie in CCDs or "digital". This kind of thinking is akin to the freaks who think that listening to vinyl recordings through tube amps is a truer reproduction than CD recordings through a transistor amp. Despite the fact the signal from the record goes through the nastiest-ass filter you've ever seen (RIAA equalization). The sound is not purer, it is more distorted, via the analog method. It might sound better, but you are fooling yourself if you think it is a truer representation.
Same goes for film.
-todd-
no it bloody isn't (Score:1)
Amen! SXGA resolution is nowhere near 35 mm. (Score:1)
At the last *two* Consumer Electronics Shows in Vegas, TI was there showing DLP on a screen I estimate was half the size of a normal theater screen. I think the DLP unit was 1024 x something. First, they showed cuts of various films. Looked awesome, no pixels. Then they showed some HDTV pictures. I was blown away! Looked like I was looking out of a window, very lifelike, almost 3D. Unlike film (especially 35mm film). Later, I went close to the screen to see if I could see pixels. I could see them at about three feet from the screen. Otherwise, they blended so damn well I just couldn't tell.
Given a bit more time to get the resolution up to 1500x, on a fullsize screen, I am confident that DLP will look just great showing film!
-todd-
Good/Bad (Score:1)
film rules! (Score:1)
What will this do to small town cinemas? (Score:1)
Can anyone else see the distributers phasing out film as quickly as possible at the behest of the large cinema chains?
Could be good or bad. (Score:1)
Either way, the only way digital will be good is if it can maintain either the same level of quality as film, or improve it. I was once forced to watch a movie on one of those hideous digital screens (looked to be about HDTV in terms of quality) and it just isn't the same. You simply don't need digital to make or show a good film.
Kubrick never used digital. Hell, he never even used stereo! Yet the experience of seeing a film like that in the theater is amazing.
Right now the whole digital film(oxymoron) thing is mostly aimed at easing distribution for major movie studios. I think this is a bad thing because the major movie studios pump mostly crap into cinemas. In this case it dosen't matter how good it looks. Crap is still crap.
Films are ALREADY DIGITAL! (Score:1)
Color photo's are no better.... (Score:1)
all MTV's fault (Score:1)