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Author
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Topic: Is 6 fL the new de-facto 3D standard already?
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Antti Nayha
Master Film Handler
Posts: 268
From: Helsinki, Finland
Registered: Oct 2008
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posted 07-18-2012 09:28 AM
I was just going through Disney’s projection docs, and it looks like their 3D light level spec has been raised from 4.5 footlamberts to 6.0. That’s what they’ve put in their documents at least since John Carter last winter (I couldn’t find a doc for Cars 2), I’ve just been slow to notice since I didn’t run JC.
Apparently Disney is not one of the studios who distribute several DCP's graded for different light levels? I may be poorly informed about this, since around here we only ever get one 3D version - most of the time with no instructions regarding light levels, save for the ones you may find on the web.
I heard that Marvel ran into problems last year when Thor was graded for 4.5 fL, because too many auditoriums just couldn't reach that in projection. This is why they decided to grade Captain America for 3.5 fL. I guess it's usually better to err towards a lower light level when grading, even if some venues are going to project your film brighter than that. Lowest common denominator, and all that.
But now, just a couple of months later, Disney has decided to raise their spec to 6 fL. Where exactly is the logic in that?
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for higher light levels for 3D. But the lack of standards is frustrating - not to mention never receiving the higher-graded DCP’s, even when your auditorium could easily do 9 fL or more...
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Frank Angel
Film God
Posts: 5305
From: Brooklyn NY USA
Registered: Dec 1999
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posted 07-22-2012 05:43 PM
Well, IMAX dual projection 3D certainly is a lot more "natural" than single projector 3D. IMAX dual projector has both eyes on the screen at the same time; all the others have each eye being temporally staggered which is a lot more unnatural, not to mention straining to see an underlit picture isn't exactly good for the eyes either. Dual projection wins in that catagory hands down.
Then as I have said before, any exhibitor who so desires can easily do dual projection 3D; no one is stopping anyone from installing a second digital projector other than the perhaps the cost. I guess it's all about whether or not an exbibitor is embarrassed enough having to present an image that once had a standard of 16ftL on their screen to one of where the standard was lowered to 4.5ftL, and then saying with a straight face that 4.5ftL looks fine.
I can never understand this reasoning. Here's the benchmark, but we can no longer meet it, so let's just change the benchmark. 16ftL is the standard to meet, not because someone decided it's a nice number, but because that's the brightness necessary for an image on a movie screen where the picture looks natural, detail is all there, etc. If 4.5ftL was the light level where the image looked natural and all the detail was there, then THAT would have been the spec to meet, but it's not. So now along comes 3D and with that system can't even come close to meeting the 16ftL spec. What to do? Change the spec to whatever the system can manage. I think it's folly. Why have specs at all?
Can't get your RTS curve to match the Dolby X-curve? No problem. Just redraw the curve to match what you can get, call it the New Spec and everyone's be happy.
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