Yeah, not my experience. No one likes it wide.The first family I knew with a widescreen, wall-size TV insisted they had to watch everything stretched wide, no matter how it had been filmed.
Yeah, not my experience. No one likes it wide.The first family I knew with a widescreen, wall-size TV insisted they had to watch everything stretched wide, no matter how it had been filmed.
Yeah, not my experience. No one likes it wide.
People like those?Except widescreen movies and TV.![]()
This is true. Motion smoothing should always be deactivated.Also, that hyper-sharp, high-frame-rate "demo" footage that they show on 4K TVs in the stores is not what a feature film will actually look like.
Kor
I'm one of those people that when visiting someone's home and sees the "smooth motion" feature on, I immediately shut it off, whether they're okay with me fiddling with the settings or not.
And if they kick your ass when they find out you screwed around with their TV, would you blame them?
I wouldn't.
I’d admit had it coming.
But so did their TV.
That said, they don’t even notice the difference.
It's not your place to judge. It's not your fucking TV.
I mean, if you politely ask them to turn it off, that'd be one thing. They might even indulge you.
But if you start messing around with people's TVs behind their back, you're asking for trouble. You've proved that you're a shitty guest who has no consideration for other people's property. It's as if you stole food from their fridge or ransacked their closet.
To put it another way...if somebody visited YOUR house and turned motion smoothing all the fucking way up, you wouldn't take too kindly to that, would you?
Oh, I think most people would.
I definitely would. I actually LIKE motion smoothing. I make it a point to have it turned on, all the time, no matter what I'm watching.
So there.![]()
The first family I knew with a widescreen, wall-size TV insisted they had to watch everything stretched wide, no matter how it had been filmed.
For the longest time my mother could not understand why there were black bars above and below or on both sides of an image on a television.
They're available now on all of the streaming services (iTunes, Vudu, Amazon, Google Play). I'd recommend iTunes or Vudu since they are in Dolby Vision.Anyone got an idea if the 4K super-HD 1-4 movies will be released for digital download? The idea of having to buy a super HD blu ray player to watch them is... Expensive!
They are actually pretty cheap these days. Walmart usually has them around $150.00.Anyone got an idea if the 4K super-HD 1-4 movies will be released for digital download? The idea of having to buy a super HD blu ray player to watch them is... Expensive!
I actually find TMP a really comfy sci-fi watch. If you want to relax and go along at a slow, slow pace it's a good movie. Then kick into TWOK for your action hit. TMP is Star Trek does 2001: A Space Odyssey. It's not 2001... But I enjoy it. Looking forward to the Director's Cut Super HD version next.They are actually pretty cheap these days. Walmart usually has them around $150.00.
I don't care for this film regardless of what version it is. The only way this movie would be watchable for me is if you tighten up all those long, boring shots and quicken the pace. But then the movie would probably be at best an hour long.
My father on the other hand, who is a die hard Trekkie and HATED this film when it was first released, loves the Director's Cut.
Good question as I noted the same thing.Maybe a silly question here. Will this be an exact duplication of the existing director's cut ( just upgraded to 4k/improving the Image)
Or are they making changes (I.e new scenes)? Reason I ask is that over at Trek Movie they mention "changes". Which to me indicates new/alternate footage
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