Post by mslo79 on Aug 12, 2017 13:17:00 GMT
sdrew13163
Maybe, but what i am talking about is basically getting something whether it be a TV or other viewing device that can mimic exactly how we see colors/images etc in person. like when you look around the room or outside etc you can tell that looks better(well at least sharper) than anything a TV can output as it's the way things naturally look.
but then again, come to think of it... i kinda like the way movies look at you can change the color/lighting etc for more dramatic effect which if we mimic real life exactly that part will be lost. so with this said... the more i think about it, i would not want to mimic that whole 'real life' thing. but maybe they can find some sorta balance of real life/that movie like effect to amp things up. either way, they will continue to make advancements in technology so we all win at the end of the day
seriously?
just the lack of proper display of the movie (since when a movie is full screen(which seems most VHS are this way) it's pretty much not displayed properly) is enough to say that's worse than anything from DVD to date regardless of the actual image quality of it.
i can't fault the theater claim but i definitely can fault the VHS claim. maybe VHS is mostly a nostalgia thing for you?
or here is a site that makes my point crystal clear on why VHS sucks... www.denofgeek.com/movies/widescreen/39431/widescreen-pan-and-scan-and-the-slow-rise-of-letterboxing ; you can read the article if you want but the main thing you need to see is that "Blade Runner: Pan & Scan vs Widescreen" video (you can skip forward to about the 30second mark if you want and watch from there. video is less than 5 min long.) as that makes it very easy to understand what i am saying as what's shown in the red square is what you see on VHS where as the whole image is what you should be seeing but do not. so as you can see that's why i say going back to VHS would be a bit of a show stopper for many movies especially when we got plenty of great technology nowadays, VHS are simply obsolete outside of some nostalgia.
I think, maybe, the closest we've ever come to a realistic "Human Eye" view is with The Revenant, due to it being shot in natural light.
Maybe, but what i am talking about is basically getting something whether it be a TV or other viewing device that can mimic exactly how we see colors/images etc in person. like when you look around the room or outside etc you can tell that looks better(well at least sharper) than anything a TV can output as it's the way things naturally look.
but then again, come to think of it... i kinda like the way movies look at you can change the color/lighting etc for more dramatic effect which if we mimic real life exactly that part will be lost. so with this said... the more i think about it, i would not want to mimic that whole 'real life' thing. but maybe they can find some sorta balance of real life/that movie like effect to amp things up. either way, they will continue to make advancements in technology so we all win at the end of the day
It's [VHS] still probably the most pure way to watch a movie to me (besides in a theater).
seriously?
just the lack of proper display of the movie (since when a movie is full screen(which seems most VHS are this way) it's pretty much not displayed properly) is enough to say that's worse than anything from DVD to date regardless of the actual image quality of it.
i can't fault the theater claim but i definitely can fault the VHS claim. maybe VHS is mostly a nostalgia thing for you?
or here is a site that makes my point crystal clear on why VHS sucks... www.denofgeek.com/movies/widescreen/39431/widescreen-pan-and-scan-and-the-slow-rise-of-letterboxing ; you can read the article if you want but the main thing you need to see is that "Blade Runner: Pan & Scan vs Widescreen" video (you can skip forward to about the 30second mark if you want and watch from there. video is less than 5 min long.) as that makes it very easy to understand what i am saying as what's shown in the red square is what you see on VHS where as the whole image is what you should be seeing but do not. so as you can see that's why i say going back to VHS would be a bit of a show stopper for many movies especially when we got plenty of great technology nowadays, VHS are simply obsolete outside of some nostalgia.
