@bostergold11@RedLReviews For the foreseeable future, yes. We don’t know when and if it’ll come back, it could be in 3-4 years, it could be in 10 years. Nobody knows.
@fiendformojitos The cameras shot all the footage in 12 Bit Color S-Log. Although it’s from a 2K DI only (many 4K releases are 2K Upscaling too), the footage has enough color information for an HDR grade.
@30GotNext First time I saw Michael Jackson as a kid was in Men in Black 2, and I thought “wow, the makeup people did a really good job on this actors face”, afterwards I saw images of him while googling the movie and thought “ohhh…”
@APPictures9 Yeah it would probably look terrible. HDR10/ Dolby Vision for home theater is encoded much differently than a Jpeg2000 DCP with P3 Color gamut, let alone a Dolby Cinema 108 nit DCP. A 4K HDR Bluray, played back on a cinema projector, would result in a gray, washed out image
@Speaks_Div@abhayisannoyed Dolby Vision/Atmos is a separate PLF offer from Dolby for Theaters which want Dolby Vision projection and Dolby Atmos, but without the accompanied Dolby Cinema design elements.
@SaveYourCinema They’ll just go the best equipped screen of a theater that has 4K laser, Atmos and a large screen, and slap their label on it. I mean, IMAX kinda did the same when they went Digital, but at least they had proprietary projection and sound systems.
@Brooklyn996171@SpiderMan_Newz@GermainLussier no.
IF the side screen are aligned correctly to the main screen, without an empty space between them, the side screens will still look bad due to dark, blurry projection, horribly stretched images and unfinished CGI.