More a question for my fellow independent cinemas. How does everyone package and handle their preroll content, especially if it tends to change per screening?
We are in the habit of DCPing everything right now, but I could see the benefits of switching. Our 50th anniversary summer series introduced a LOT of per screening extra pre-roll, often film specific, it became as much or more work in DCP-o-matic every day to prep everything per-show per-format etc as our bigger festivals are.
Mostly i'm talking about static slides... we would probably still DCP our in-house video bumpers unless I get 5.1 audio from the ALT source too.
Pros vs Cons?
DCPs leave a bit to be desired in slide transition options, and no support for animations like in powerpoint etc.
My main hesitations for throwing ALT content on screen before any video bumpers is the dance required to get content to fit in film masking, which DCP-o-matic can solve for us. That and I haven't tried sending anything other than ALT178 sources from a laptop, ideally there would be a way to utilize the flat, scope, and full custom 2K rasters on the ALT input.
Missing out on DCI colors is not really a concern, cause most of our slides come to us in sRGB anyway.
But the ability to actually loop a slide deck from ALT would be a big plus.
We commonly lean on OBS for quick and dirty content switching in a non-film context. But even OBS would have fallen short for our pre-roll this season, because this year they wanted different hang-times on specific slides (which DCPomatic can accommodate). It would probably be powerpoint or keynote to drive a pre-roll loop if such requirements persisted on an ALT source. Or just ask them for a power point to begin with and let them get as creative as they want with transitions and animations.
I do like the reliability of everything being in the cinema server, and the ability to utilize our macros for automations within those pre-roll contexts.
There is a way around the lack of animation/transitions of course... and that is to author the slide deck in powerpoint or the like, and capture it's playout as video, but that seems like adding more work when the slide content changes, not less.
We are in the habit of DCPing everything right now, but I could see the benefits of switching. Our 50th anniversary summer series introduced a LOT of per screening extra pre-roll, often film specific, it became as much or more work in DCP-o-matic every day to prep everything per-show per-format etc as our bigger festivals are.
Mostly i'm talking about static slides... we would probably still DCP our in-house video bumpers unless I get 5.1 audio from the ALT source too.
Pros vs Cons?
DCPs leave a bit to be desired in slide transition options, and no support for animations like in powerpoint etc.
My main hesitations for throwing ALT content on screen before any video bumpers is the dance required to get content to fit in film masking, which DCP-o-matic can solve for us. That and I haven't tried sending anything other than ALT178 sources from a laptop, ideally there would be a way to utilize the flat, scope, and full custom 2K rasters on the ALT input.
Missing out on DCI colors is not really a concern, cause most of our slides come to us in sRGB anyway.
But the ability to actually loop a slide deck from ALT would be a big plus.
We commonly lean on OBS for quick and dirty content switching in a non-film context. But even OBS would have fallen short for our pre-roll this season, because this year they wanted different hang-times on specific slides (which DCPomatic can accommodate). It would probably be powerpoint or keynote to drive a pre-roll loop if such requirements persisted on an ALT source. Or just ask them for a power point to begin with and let them get as creative as they want with transitions and animations.
I do like the reliability of everything being in the cinema server, and the ability to utilize our macros for automations within those pre-roll contexts.
There is a way around the lack of animation/transitions of course... and that is to author the slide deck in powerpoint or the like, and capture it's playout as video, but that seems like adding more work when the slide content changes, not less.
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