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Jetrell Fo

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Join date
12-Aug-2004
Last activity
18-May-2017
Posts
6,102

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Post
#651310
Topic
DTS audio preservation .... UPDATE 07 May 2015 ... Work In Progress
Time

dvdmike said:

TServo2049 said:

A contact of mine passed this link on to me:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/LOT-OF-2600-DTS-DISC-HQ-THEATER-35mm-FILM-MOVIE-AUDIO-35-mm-FEATURE-HD-SOUND-/251307635587?pt=US_Movies_Other_Formats&hash=item3a831a3383

Wow what a great lot, good thing they are all too recent for us as I don't think anyone can afford that!

Mind you Casino Royale would be fun to hear 

I have Casino Royale .........  :)

Post
#651303
Topic
DTS audio preservation .... UPDATE 07 May 2015 ... Work In Progress
Time

TServo2049 said:

A contact of mine passed this link on to me:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/LOT-OF-2600-DTS-DISC-HQ-THEATER-35mm-FILM-MOVIE-AUDIO-35-mm-FEATURE-HD-SOUND-/251307635587?pt=US_Movies_Other_Formats&hash=item3a831a3383

If I had that kind of liquid asset I'd be all over it.  I'm going to watch it though to see if it actually sells at that price.

Thanks for the link.

:)

At this point, I am considering taking this project private.  This project is special to me and we're having fun putting together the audio to see where it takes us.  I also have to realize that if interest here dwindles than I am only crowding up the forum with posts on the matter.  

I know myself and DoomBot will continue our efforts because we share the same interests in it.  I guess we'll see where it goes.

:) 

Post
#651203
Topic
DTS audio preservation .... UPDATE 07 May 2015 ... Work In Progress
Time

hairy_hen said:

I haven't been following this thread before, and only just read it through in its entirety.  While I don't wish to rain on the parade, it should perhaps be tempered with some healthy scepticism.  I'm not convinced that it's entirely worthwhile to go to the trouble of working with cinema DTS discs unless it is absolutely necessary.

To use The Matrix as an example: there has been talk of the Bluray soundtrack being inferior to previous versions, and I have to say I'm baffled as to where this claim comes from.  After having heard it numerous times on the old DVD, I found not even the slightest hint that anything on the Bluray had been altered.  In every way it was exactly the same mix—same balance, same dynamics, same everything.

Now admittedly I don't yet have an HDMI receiver and therefore can only listen to the 640 kbps AC3 track, rather than the Dolby TrueHD.  But it would astonish me greatly if the two actually turned out to be any different from each other.  If there is a difference, it may just as easily turn out to be something happening during playback, such as an unwanted dynamic range compression mode being activated, or a difference in DialNorm values causing the overall volume to come out lower.

When comparing soundtracks in this manner, you must make absolutely sure that they are completely level-matched, or any comparison of their relative dynamics will be rendered meaningless.  Do not ever believe that you are immune to being fooled by differences in playback volume, for even experienced professionals can be tricked into believing they hear superior sound quality when in fact all that has happened is that something was made louder.  It is shockingly easy to fall into this trap, and I believe that a lot of what people think they hear is actually only this kind of placebo effect.  This particularly applies to bass content because of the Fletcher-Munson curves, whereby our hearing is particularly insensitive to low frequencies, and consequently is very susceptible to a false perception of level differences if playback volumes are not equal.

To give a textbook example of this, consider The Phantom Menace.  I have heard repeatedly about how much better the movie sounds on laserdisc than on DVD, but this is actually false.  This web page measures the output levels of both, and determines that the two versions are virtually identical to each other in dynamic range.  The only difference is that the laserdisc version is mastered 8 dB louder than the DVD.  That's a huge discrepancy: of course one is going to sound more powerful than the other!  But if you turn up the volume by 8 dB to compensate when playing the DVD version, this will be entirely cancelled out.

The recent Batman films have also been mentioned here, but again I find no difference whatsoever in how they sound.  Last summer I attended a triple feature screening of all three at the Cine Capri, the best movie theatre in Phoenix, and what I heard there was identical to what is on the DVD and Bluray releases.  The total effect was considerably more powerful, of course, due to the huge auditorium and the absolutely killer Dolby setup they've got in there (even more so now that they've installed the new Atmos system), but the mixes themselves haven't been changed at all.

So, while I absolutely applaud the goal of preserving theatrical mixes and making them available, it is important first to verify that there is actually a need to do so in the first place.  There are plenty of films whose soundtracks have indeed been badly mangled on home video (the site I linked to also has another page that conclusively demonstrates how much better the original mix of Jurassic Park is, for one), and it would be best to concentrate such efforts on theatrical mixes that truly are unavailble through any other means.  And don't be tricked into thinking that the delivery format somehow results in better sound, either—all that really matters is the mix itself, and whether it is packaged as Dolby or DTS is largely irrelevant providing everything else is the same.  The AC3 codec is more efficient than DTS, able to achieve similar sound quality at only half the bandwidth, so comparing the numbers doesn't really mean much on its own.

hairy_hen,

Thank you for the information presented in your post.  This preservation project was never meant to replace any current audio configurations.  It is meant more as a companion project to have a "known source" option for movies where DTS was available in the theater for a particular movie.  Since DTS started in 1993, there are a bunch of films excluded unless they were re-released to theaters for special runs such as the Director's Cut of Alien.  This project is also a way to preserve the theatrical audio because they can be damn hard to get a hold of, LOL. 

I am not looking to change the world, just give something back to a place that has given to me.

I would certainly appreciate any insight you would care to share about all of this.  Every little bit helps.

Shawn    

Post
#650641
Topic
Info: Which HD-DVD is better than Blu-Ray?
Time

_,,,^..^,,,_ said:

Jetrell Fo said:

Jonno said:

Also Apollo 13 is much better in HD-DVD.

I own this HD-DVD and I can attest to it's awesome picture.

:)

Maybe it's time to do "Apollo 13 [spoRv]" (new acronym, do you like it?) - HD-DVD video with LD DTS audio (and, if needed, LD chroma too...)

I do have cinema DTS for this one ..... so if it's a consideration, let me know.  We'll get it worked up for you.

:)

Post
#650630
Topic
Info: Which HD-DVD is better than Blu-Ray?
Time

dark_jedi said:

LMAO! I just have to answer this, do not listen to him, go ahead and get excited, the Xbox 360 HD DVD player is what most people, if not all I know that does these kinds of projects use, I use it myself, so YES you can rip your HD DVD's with what you have, you just need to make sure you get the driver is all.

d_j,

If you HAVE a problem with me, take it to pm, do NOT bring it into someone's thread.  Otherwise I WILL ask a moderator to step in.

Thanks

Post
#650469
Topic
Conan The Barbarian 1982 US Theatrical Edition & BONUS! *RELEASED*
Time

Hey, I had an idea about sharing this for others.  Does anyone here who torrents have a seedbox and maybe time for 1 week of seeding this only?

The reason I ask is because maybe an easier method would be to setup a private torrent, send that file to those who want it, and let it seed for maybe a week so those that get it can share it with others from there.

No ratio, a group of folks is able to get it(which saves TeamBlu time & effort for other things), and everyone is smiling.

Just a thought anyways. 

Bravo to TeamBlu for the release.  Thank you for all the hard work.

Cheers,

Shawn

 

 

Post
#650435
Topic
The Thing (1982) - sound mixes (Released)
Time

dark_jedi said:

_,,,^..^,,,_ said:

No problem to convert PAL speed to proper 23.976fps and sync it to the video. Well, according to LDDB:

"When Palmer shouts to Nauls' to "turn that crap down, I was shot today!", a different track, Superstition by Stevie Wonder, is playing from Nauls' ghetto blaster in the kitchen. A different track plays on the Pioneer Cinema PAL release [PLFEB 33051]. I dont remember Stevie on the 1980's UK video releases either...

...The Stevie Wonder track is the original song played in the movie. The song was changed in some releases due to licensing."

So, strictly speaking, the PAL LD soundtrack is not the original... should it must be included in a preservation then?

Now that I know that HD-DVD has a better quality than BD, I'd like to know if the HD-DVD is the "right" version to go... I mean, has it good colors, no missing edges, no missing frames/scenes, no alterations? I agree with DJ that a poor LD could not stand at the same level of a well crafted HD-DVD or BD, but if I have to choose, I prefer lower resolution video with the closest image to the original theatrical version, than the top-notch-out-of-this-world video quality *enanched* edition - but you know, I'm an old man from an old continent who loves old analog video formats, so... (^^,)

Have you not been reading this thread? the HD DVD is the go to video right now, until a new remaster comes out if any does, I hope it does at some point but who knows, but almost all want this but you still question it lol, believe me, your LD capture will not touch this HD DVD video, there is just no way.

DJ, cool down some.  No need to come out heavy hitting, LOL.  I understand where Andrea is coming from and a lot can still be learned from analog transfers.  I think you've made it abundantly clear which version you prefer and a number of us feel the same but not everyone has the capability to watch or own HD-DVD.  When my US version of The Thing arrives I've told Andrea I'll hook him up so he can see the difference.  All of us here are very appreciative of what TeamBlu has accomplished and we're just as excited about what they're working on.

Jonno, back to you mate ........  :)  :)    

Post
#650189
Topic
The Thing (1982) - sound mixes (Released)
Time

Jonno said:

Just to clarify, these are the discs that I have captured (and yes, this thread is about The Thing, not EFNY!)

Universal Letterboxed edition (1990)

Universal Signature Collection (1998)

I only have the means to capture the PCM Dolby Stereo, not the 5.1 AC-3 - though as others have said, that is probably an identical mix to the one included on the DVD (and perhaps even the HD versions), and unless there's some evidence that it's a 70mm 6-track transfer I'm not particularly interested in messing about with that.

(The remixes have their supporters - apparently they sound quite close to the original - but they're remixes nonetheless and I'm looking for a purer source here.)

The HD-DVD video is demonstrably the best choice for picture, so I'll certainly be syncing to that. As to whether to keep it VC-1 or convert, I guess that's for individuals to choose for themselves but personally I'll do my very best to not re-encode if I can avoid it (though since VC-1 can be a bugger to work with I may have no choice there).

So folks want both versions then? I guess that's my summer taken care of...

I'd be happy with just the PCM Dolby Stereo.  I SO wish there had been a DTS track for this somewhere ..... THAT would be cool.

You know how to reach me ..... LOL

 

:)

Post
#650182
Topic
The Thing (1982) - sound mixes (Released)
Time

bigrob said:

_,,,^..^,,,_ said:

Jonno, it seems there is no Signature Collection laserdisc, according to LDDB - the latest NTSC laserdisc edition is this (I have this one) released in 1994... maybe it's still not present on LDDB; in this case, have you more info about it?

 This is for The Thing mate ;)

Jonno, glad your enjoying the disc i sent you, like i said mate, take your time with it but yeah, i was gonna suggest using the HD-DVD transfer as well since it's superior

May I ask how one would go about swapping the HD-DVD video for the Blu?  That in itself would be mighty helpful for me.  I'm wanting to use some of the HD-DVD video I have and match it with the DTS cinema audio to make a custom disc of sorts.  For the Thing, I'd love to have the PCM and the 5.1.  If there is opportunity for a snail mail disc I'd be grateful.

:)

Post
#649883
Topic
DTS audio preservation .... UPDATE 07 May 2015 ... Work In Progress
Time

Thanks Stamper and PDB, for the positive responses.  I am just gauging the interest in donations of media at this point but you're on the list PDB.

As for a torrent, my connection isn't great but if Stamper could upload it, DoomBot and I will make out an info file with the specs of the audio and maybe DB can add a little something about his process.

I am thankful for the assistance to get this going.  It is appreciated greatly.

:) 

Post
#649534
Topic
DTS audio preservation .... UPDATE 07 May 2015 ... Work In Progress
Time

OK, I have a small update for all of you ......

DTS audio for the Matrix is finished.  The 2 other films in the trilogy are being worked on.  This audio was synched to the Bluray.  The end result was a 2.11GB DTS-HD file.

Format                                   : DTS
Format/Info                              : Digital Theater Systems
Format profile                           : MA / Core
File size                                : 2.11 GiB
Overall bit rate mode                    : Variable

Audio
Format                                   : DTS
Format/Info                              : Digital Theater Systems
Format profile                           : MA / Core
Mode                                     : 16
Format settings, Endianness              : Big
Bit rate mode                            : Variable
Bit rate                                 : Unknown / 1 509 Kbps
Channel(s)                               : 6 channels
Channel positions                        : Front: L C R, Side: L R, LFE
Sampling rate                            : 48.0 KHz
Bit depth                                : 16 bits
Compression mode                         : Lossless / Lossy

I believe I will be getting a PCM version of the DTS cinema audio as well.

It is currently not available for download but if there are enough interested parties I can set something up.

My partner in crime, DoomBot, has been kind enough to offer his editing/synching talents to help get these started.  CapableMetal has been our wise and honorable Yoda.  He's been so very helpful in working out a good method for working with these audio files.

Make sure to thank these folks, they deserve it.  DoomBot received a 25GB BD-r from me with different film audio on it.  After the Matrix Trilogy is finished I'd like to randomly do the other ones so each release is a surprise.  Please, no asking ...... it ruins the surprise.  I thought this would be a fun way to do these.  Let us know if you're interested.

I would also like gauge interest in media donations.  Maybe we could come up with a way for folks who donate to get a choice of audio sent to them on a BD-r before they are uploaded for everyone else.  Let me know how you all feel about this, please. 

Thanks for your kindness and patience.        

Shawn

Post
#649429
Topic
kk650's Miscellaneous Regraded Films (Released)
Time

Turisu said:

The thing is kk650 freely admits that these regraded release aren't restoring the original theatrical color timing. They've just basically been white-balanced but in the case of BR releases that have a blanket tint added throughout the movie this may be preferable for some.

 

This means that he was upfront about what was done.  That is good.  This way people can make their own choice on whether they want to check it out or not.  That's good for everyone.

:)

Post
#649195
Topic
Harmy's STAR WARS Despecialized Edition HD - V2.7 - MKV (Released)
Time

yoda-sama said:

Perhaps FILMS rather than FILM, so we don't sound like we're covered in a hard to scrub off layer of Harmy...

Strangely, since the Despecialized Edition being covered in Harmy Film already makes them popular enough for so many to be enjoying it, having T-shirts for people to cover themselves in Harmy Film, would be more of a positive than a negative.  The idea itself is about helping out or thanking, that's positive, right?

;)