6x05: Schisms. My nerd rage flared up a little bit watching that scene.

  • @[email protected]
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    52 months ago

    So if the original recordings still existed on film, you’d be able to do it, if you redid the mastering using said film?

    • @ummthatguy
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      72 months ago

      My understanding is that if there’s a master in proper film/celluloid, it’s possible to upscale and variably clean up. Whereas, if it was recorded strictly on VHS tape, there’s not a lot to be done quality-wise that won’t butcher it.

      • Flying SquidM
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        2 months ago

        AI upscaling does a really good job with things recorded on video tape. I’ve been very impressed lately.

        Obviously, the AI is putting data that wasn’t originally there into the image, but the approximation is good enough that you pretty much don’t notice.

        Check out, if you can, what Peter Jackson did with WWI footage for the documentary he made. It’s really amazing. Not video tape, but a similar missing data and low quality problem.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          I watched that WW1 documentary.
          Honestly, I liked that they slowed down the footage (and still don’t understand why that’s not always done when playing old video recorded with a lower frame rate), but the upscaling still looked fake and artificial. I’d rather have film grain out the Wazoo than that.

          • Flying SquidM
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            22 months ago

            In this particular case, we’re talking about CG special effects footage being the only thing that needs to be upscaled. It’s artificial to begin with.

    • JWBananas
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      22 months ago

      They do. But the VFX/CGI do not.

      Surprisingly, much of the original CGI source does exist. And the models were overdeveloped and thus basically usable as-is.

      But it’s still a lot of painstaking, manual work.

      It’s a money problem, not a technical one.