nicolas wrote: Mon Jan 08, 2024 11:21 amIt’s really disappointing but once they see that sales are superb, they could definitely say “Hey, why don’t we upgrade more of our catalogue?”. They won’t feel hound by DI limitations as the AI takes care of the rest. The annoying thing is that in the case of The Wailing and Man from Nowhere both of their original BDs have issues that make me prefer the look of the UHDs. From what I read this is the same for others as well but it isn’t an ideal scenario.
Part of it HAS to do with how the public reacts to it, and it'd be wonderful if people were to vote with their wallets and cut short any viability for such shenanigans. But then, of course, it's not what's happening (especially when there's either no previous BD or a vastly perfectible one), even less so when knowledgeable viewers are fine with it or even find excuses for it.
nicolas wrote: Mon Jan 08, 2024 11:21 amCombine that with the admittedly attractive price point and it’s tempting to just go with it. For now this AI use is still too niche to be a bigger problem but once the major studios use these tools for remastering films of directors who are no longer with us instead of properly restoring them as always, then they’ll likely feel more pushback by general viewers as well. Cameron is Cameron - unless someone’d storm his Lightstrom offices and put a gun to his head, nothing would happen. I’m more afraid that once the process gets cheaper these studios experiment with catalogue titles.
My issue is more of a "haven't we learnt our lesson already ?" thing. AI was bound to be used this way, I'm just frustated it ended being that predictable. And while it remains indeed extremely marginal, it does mean that studios and labels and rightholders ARE toying with those in a way-more-blanket-y manner than they should (unlike, say, what was done on Mission Cléopatre, where Topaz AI was used for a total of 2 minutes in order to better blend specific CG effects which were performed at a much lower rez than the restoration workflow).
Stuff like "hey, why not upscaling this way and be done with it ?" shouldn't happen. We knew how to upscale to 4K before : why not just, you know, keeping it simple and doing it this way instead (and do like what Second Sight did with The Babadook or The Guest) ? Otherwise : how about not trying to release UHDs of movies that just aren't good candidates for it ?
And yes, it does make it look like the Pandora's Box has been open, so I worry if it might get more widely used : my first encounter with such methods were in 2020 with Turbine's Crying Freeman UHD and then in 2021 with their An American Werewolf in London's UHD. So that was 2 in 2 years. And now, in less than 12 months : Picnic at Hanging Rock, Titanic-Abyss-Aliens-True Lies, The Wailing and The Man From Nowhere.