SOLIDSNAKE
Super Freak
You need to see the TDK Bank Robbery sequence in Blu-ray and true 1080p. You'd change your tune in a heartbeat.
helll yeaa !!
that preview on batman begins blue ray was just unreal!!
1080P ROCKS !!
You need to see the TDK Bank Robbery sequence in Blu-ray and true 1080p. You'd change your tune in a heartbeat.
Sorry, i've got a lot of annoying ^^^^ from a bunch of Blu Ray owners. Nothing wrong with either format.
Ford liked it. So...dont think he'll say that.
Well, when you're doing the talkshow circuit to promote it, you kinda have to say you like it, don't you?
Well, when you're doing the talkshow circuit to promote it, you kinda have to say you like it, don't you?
Heck, I even watch VHS' from time to time....
I've spent countless hours at Best Buy watching the hi-def TV's and all the new "superior" technology, trying to research and also to justify going that route. Sure, I see a difference in picture quality. But it's not what it's hyped to be IMHO and not so superior that I'm ready to lay out thousands of dollars to upgrade. Actually, most hi-def sets look kinda blurry to me unless I'm about 8 to ten feet away, minimum. I'm also the kind of person who never turns off the TV. I hear that will cut a plasma screen's life in half, and their lifespan isn't that great to start with from what I'm told. Hell, my buddy argues that I don't see the colossal quality difference because he says the floor models at Best Buy are starting to fade. Geez. A $2000.00 TV that starts to go South just from 6 months or so as a floor model? Not really my thing. The crappy thing is, it seems damn near impossible to find ANY TV in stores these days that isn't an over-priced, over-hyped plasma screen. No regular sets, not even the short-lived flat screens. It's like everyone is now expected to shell out thousands for a TV. For my budget, I would have to get a really small set. Does anyone else feel like our "modern" technology is pushing back into the 50's ? I really have no interest of the $800.00 equivalent of a 13" b&w set.
Your first mistake was going to Best Buy to experience the difference in the technology. Those dolts don't know how to properly set-up and calibrate the HT experience at all.
I was at Costco and they had the new Sleeping Beauty disc playing on a widescreen plasma HDTV, but the connected DVD player was set to 480p and a 4x3 screen. I looked for the remote to make a few changes and exponentially increase the picture quality, but I couldn't find it anywhere.
Your post made me think about this conundrum...if an animated film was done in lower quality format and then updated to DVD and now is being updated to BluRay, how much more can it be updated short of rebuilding all the individual cells one-by-one to improve on clarity? I mean, part of the charm of older animation, is the graininess. That's why the original SW films look so much more, ahem, realistic, since they used models rather than super slick CG which looks clean even when it's dirty.
Once you go HD, you don't go back. I'm still in awe at how amazing a 40 year old movie like 2001: A Space Odyssey looks in HD.
I have nothing against DVDs. I was an early adaptor about 10 years ago and have an enormous collection. Now that I've moved into the HD realm, I've stopped buying DVDs because I'm done buying multiple copies of the same movie. Even if it does come with something cool like the Crystal Skull.
I've spent countless hours at Best Buy watching the hi-def TV's and all the new "superior" technology, trying to research and also to justify going that route. Sure, I see a difference in picture quality. But it's not what it's hyped to be IMHO and not so superior that I'm ready to lay out thousands of dollars to upgrade. Actually, most hi-def sets look kinda blurry to me unless I'm about 8 to ten feet away, minimum. I'm also the kind of person who never turns off the TV. I hear that will cut a plasma screen's life in half, and their lifespan isn't that great to start with from what I'm told. Hell, my buddy argues that I don't see the colossal quality difference because he says the floor models at Best Buy are starting to fade. Geez. A $2000.00 TV that starts to go South just from 6 months or so as a floor model? Not really my thing. The crappy thing is, it seems damn near impossible to find ANY TV in stores these days that isn't an over-priced, over-hyped plasma screen. No regular sets, not even the short-lived flat screens. It's like everyone is now expected to shell out thousands for a TV. For my budget, I would have to get a really small set. Does anyone else feel like our "modern" technology is pushing back into the 50's ? I really have no interest of the $800.00 equivalent of a 13" b&w set.
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