Marvolo
Avenger
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- Dec 29, 2006
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OK yeah, I definitely don't know about this crap as much as you so I thank yo for typing all that out for me.
long & short, yes I was hoping that blu-ray would be a tech that's so future proof that it'd automatically be able to render passed 1080p and not have it as an eventually obsolete-able resolution. this means that everybody who bought those blu ray collections just to upgrade from the boxes of dvd collections they already had, will have to do go through the same process with the future 4k collections, in an era where physical formatting is being phased out in general.
so, this sucks.
I think you're looking at this all wrong. The development of 4K and other future higher resolution formats are wonderful things. It allows you to see a film at home with very little to no compression or degradation. Most importantly tho blu-ray has directly influenced the preservation of films. I mean look at some of the films that have been restored since blu-ray came out: Ben-Hur, Lawrence of Arabia, Casablanca, Citizen Kane, Once Upon A Time in the West, Kubrick's films etc These are films that had dirty scratched film prints. But because blu-ray has such a high resolution studios couldn't put those prints on discs so they had to go back and rescan them and spend thousands to have professionals come in and clean the dirt off and fix the tears frame by frame and they regraded them and rebuilt the audio tracks and cleaned those too. This is stuff that only happened because of blu-ray. And when 4K hits the market next winter some studios will go back and make new scans. Because of this those classic important films now have nice clean prints and 2K and 4K scans that will last much longer than they would have when they were dirty and scratched. My point is that without blu-ray and these upgrades to home video we would be in very bad shape. Film and it's preservation and home video go hand in hand. This is the reason director's were head over heels for blu-ray.
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