World Cup 3D locations

SBS has announced the cities and channels on which 3D World Cup matches will be available, along with identifying the fifteen to be shown in that format. These include most of the quarter finals, both semi finals and the final itself.

The places in Australian where you will be able to get it are Sydney, Perth, Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne, Newcastle and Wollongong. Tough luck Tassie!

And tough luck Canberra.

You will need to tune in a new station to receive it, and of course have a suitable Sony or Samsung 3D TV.

Posted in 3D, DTV | 8 Comments

Canberra and the regions lose yet again

SBS has been advertising how they are going to broadcast some 15 of the World Cup football matches in 3D. A world first, apparently.

I have just telephoned them to find out who will get to see them. All capital cities, apparently. Of course, Canberra is only the capital of Australia, so it receives regional TV, and thus won’t get the 3D.

I am very keen on getting ahold of some. I don’t much care for the game itself, but it would be great to have some broadcast content for testing 3D TVs. If any of you out there live in a real capital city, and can capture a few gigabytes of actual 3D broadcast on your computer, or port it in original format from a PVR to your computer, and burn it to a blank DVD to post to me, I’d be very appreciative. It could be the World Cup, or the earlier Rugby test broadcasts. The original format and file names should be retained, rather than any attempt made to turn it into a playable disc. I ought to be able to get it onto one or another of my PVRs to use as a test clip.

Incidentally, the first to request in comments will receive a copy of The Bourne Identity on Blu-ray. No box, no label, but the real thing anyway.

Posted in 3D, Blu-ray, DTV, Giveaway | 6 Comments

The older Von Sydow

Last night I watched Shutter Island for the second time on Blu-ray. It is worth watching twice for reasons that you will work out after you’ve watched it the first time.

One aspect of it had me puzzled. German actor Max von Sydow appears as an aged psychiatrist, but he actually looks no older than he did 37 years ago as a priest in The Exorcist (see picture to right).

You may recall, he seems very frail in that movie, which is necessary for the plot.

So I looked him up on IMDB, and found that he was only about 44 when the older movie was shot. All these years I had assumed that he was an old man back in 1973.

Turns out that his appearance was in fact achieved by masterful makeup, and I’d say masterful acting.

I wonder whether, when Warner Bros gets around to releasing The Exorcist on Blu-ray, if it will go with the original or ”The Version You’ve Never Seen’. Ideally it would use seamless branching to pack both versions on the disc, but that doesn’t seem to be the way it does things.

Posted in Blu-ray, Cinema | 2 Comments

Crosstalk free 3D and the art of Soccer

Through the miracle of pen and paper you are reading this many, many hours after I wrote it (actually on Wednesday evening, 2 June). I am in Sydney at a private home in the salubrious suburb of Rose Bay. Were it not 8:30pm I might be able to see the glorious harbour views this location would have to offer.

Instead I’m sitting on a couch, rudely ignoring any who would seek to engage me in conversation, scribbling on this note pad and hoping my right ear will soon recover. Rogue Traders have just performed several songs. In order to position myself for a good view of the 3D big screen, I ended up with said ear a bit too close to a loudspeaker.

The event is a bit weird. I’m here as a guest of Sony (it’s putting me up in a hotel as well, this being an evening event). The main purpose seems to be for it to announce that it will be bringing an undisclosed number of 3D TVs into Australia prior to the start of the World Cup football competition, which starts in a week or so. Apparently SBS will be broadcasting some games in 3D on a dedicated channel.

In Canberra? Who knows.

Samsung 3D TV owners, and those buying this limited number of Sony TVs, will be able to enjoy this.

Of course, the event has given me the chance to check out my previous impressions of 3D TV, and in particular whether the cross talk problems of which I’ve previously written are evident.

As far as I can see, and I’m sitting here looking for it very carefully, there hasn’t been the slightest hint of crosstalk. I have looked closely at extended clips from Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs (to be released in Australia on Blu-ray 3D on 14 July 2010) and G-Force. In the former there were plenty of scenes in which food was falling from the sky. The depth effect on this fast moving material was excellent, and sometimes seemed to extend outside the viewing area itself. The picture is formatted at 2.35:1, and very occasionally a falling food item seemed to pass through the black top and bottom bars as well as the main picture area. I didn’t have control of the remote, so I couldn’t rewind to check. It is possible that it was an illusion.

The lack of crosstalk makes the 3D effect considerably more effective, because the image is clean. Of course, there are only four 3D TVs here, and all may have been tuned up with enormous care. Getting a production unit into the office will be the final test.

I also closely examined some 3D soccer material. The elements where just about everything on the screen was in focus were, to my eye, more impressive and easier to watch, than stuff where there were distance-related focus issues. An example of the latter was an actual football game, shot a night (therefore reducing depth of field) in which the players were in focus but the crowd behind them wasn’t. I’d glance at the crowd, and of course they remained out of focus. In the real world, they would come into focus when looked at.

There were also a number of still photos in a slide show, made to demonstrate some forthcoming Sony digital still cameras that use a panoramic shooting mode to generate 3D stills. Some of these looking incredible, but it must be said that apparently these were mockups of the types of results the cameras are supposed to produce.

There was a racing game on the PS3 as well, in 3D. I found this least convincing. The fast moving out-of-focus foliage as it passed to the left and right just seemed to blur in a way at odds with the 3D effect.

Anyway, firmware 3.2 for the Sony Playstation 3 will add 3D games support, with another firmware promised for later this year to provide 3D movie support. Sony is also releasing a couple of 3D Blu-ray players (BDPS470 – $299, BDPS570 – $379) and a bunch of 3D TVs, some with integrated 3D (the LX900 series: 52” LX900 – $5,499, 60” LX900 – $7,499, including two pairs of 3D glasses), some with 3D support (40” HX800 – $2,799, 46” HX800 – $3,499, 55” HX800 – $4,699, 46” HX900 – $4,699, 52” HX900 – $5,699). This last lot need the addition of the 3D IR transmitter ($69) and shutter glasses ($99 each).

Lots of pretty people at this event, by the way, almost none of whom I recognise. An exception is Hayley Warner, a runner up in a recent Australian Idol, who was watching Rogue Traders perform with what looked like a great deal of professional interest. A journalist mentioned that he had seen a certain morning show hostess, and that her charisma seemed to surround her with a metre wide aura. I went looking and all I saw was a middle-aged woman, well dressed, well made-up, looking quite unexceptional, if it weren’t for the group of people surrounding here who seemed vaguely captured by awe.

Posted in 3D, Equipment, Travel | 1 Comment

Blu-ray giveaway – Splinter

Here’s a cheap horror thriller from Icon. No proper label, no box, but the movie’s fine as far as it goes: Splinter. First request in comments from an Australian resident gets it.

Running time: 82 minutes
Picture: 2.35:1, 1080p24, MPEG2 @ 32.33Mbps
Sound: English: Dolby TrueHD 16/48 3/2.1 @ 2151kbps (embedded Dolby Digital 3/2.1 @ 640kbps); English, 2 x commentaries: PCM 16/48 2/0.0 @ 1536kbps
Subtitles: English for the Hearing Impaired
Extras: 8 ‘Podcasts’ (480i60, MPEG4 AVC, LPCM2.0 @ 1536kps – 20 minutes)
Restrictions: Rated MA (Australian rating); Region Free

Posted in Blu-ray, Disc details, Giveaway | 2 Comments

Madman & Luc Besson

It looks like Madman Entertainment has taken over pretty much the entire rights to Australian distribution of the Luc Besson oeuvre. The documentary Atlantis: A World Beyond Words and the drama Le grand bleu will both be out on Blu-ray soon, to be followed by La Femme Nikita and Leon: The Professional, both excellent movies. And I’ve just looked at the company’s August catalogue to find that coming out in that month is Subway, Le Dernier Combat (The Last Battle) and — at last! — The Fifth Element.

That last one has been a very controversial title in the Blu-ray community. Sony released a very poor quality version back in 2006. It was heavily criticised, so Sony released a remastered version of much higher quality, and subsequently released a version in Australia. Some claimed that the picture qualityof the Australian version was inferior to the remastered US version (eg. here), but I did detailed examinations of both versions (here and here) and established, almost conclusively I believe, that they were the same.

And then Sony discontinued it.

So of course it will be extremely interesting to see what Madman does with this movie. I shall do my very best to report on this title: the seventh version of The Fifth Element I have played with (VHS, standard Australian DVD release, Australian Superbit DVD release, US Sony Blu-ray release Mk1, Australian Sony Blu-ray release and US Sony Blu-ray release Mk2).

Posted in Blu-ray, Disc details | 3 Comments

From the archives – 1998

I’ve just submitted my review column for this Monday’s The Canberra Times (the Panasonic PT-AE4000E full HD projector, if you’re interested). As I glanced through the folder containing these reviews, my eye fell on one I did back in late 1998 on what proved to be a short-lived technology: the consumer CD recorder. Check out the prices towards the bottom, not just of the unit but of the blank discs.

Philips CDR 765 Rewriteable CD writer/player

For the first dozen years of its existence, the compact disc had just a single function: to distribute pre-recorded audio. But over the past couple of years, CD recorders have been appearing. These allow direct digital copies of music onto an audio CD-R, resulting in an identical sound to the originals. To do such high quality copying another CD player with a digital output was required.

Now Philips has released a twin deck CD recorder. The CDR 765 allows the direct digital dubbing of CDs onto audio CD-Rs within one unit, and at double speed, no less.

The right hand player is pretty much a standard CD player, while the left hand one not only plays CDs, but records CD-Rs. It will only record onto audio CD-Rs. These are identical to data CD-Rs (available for less than half the price) except for some identifying code pre-recorded onto them. Audio CD recorders will not record onto the cheaper CD-Rs. The rationale is that higher prices are charged for audio CD-Rs to allow royalties to be distributed amongst artists. However it appears that this does not happen in Australia, so recording a CD (even onto cassette, even for personal use) is a breach of the Copyright Act. The unit incorporates the Serial Copy Management System, which allows an original CD to be digitally copied, but the copy cannot in turn be digitally copied.

Aside from the legal issues, the Philips CDR 765 works very well. I examined the digital data from a couple of tracks after a double speed dub and found that the copy was absolutely perfect. You can also record digitally from an external source, or analogue. In the latter case, a level control provides nine decibels of adjustment. This may be insufficient for low level phono outputs.

Dubbing CDs digitally automatically handles track markings. The CDR 765 also works with audio rewritable CDs. This new format does not necessarily play back properly on standard CD players, but does have the advantage of allowing you to re-write over a CD. In view of the cost of each CD-RW — around $40, compared with $8 for an audio CD-R — perhaps the only real use for such a disc is to get a recording from an analogue source right, and then dub it over onto a cheaper disc.

The Philips CDR 765 costs $1,395.

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Region A

I see that The Criterion Collection has UK movie Walkabout, set entirely in Australia, available now on Blu-ray. Pity its stuff is Region A, so it won’t work in the great majority of Australian and UK Blu-ray players.

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Would you like a movie?

If so, the first to ask in comments can have Into the Blue, a modest thriller about beautiful people swimming around in a tropical paradise. No box, no proper disc label. I’ll post within Australia.

Running time: 110 minutes
Picture: 2.35:1, 1080p24, MPEG2 @ 21.04Mbps
Sound: English: Dolby Digital 3/2.1 @ 640kbps; English: PCM 16/48 3/2.1 @ 4608kbps
Subtitles: English, English for the Hearing Impaired, Dutch, Arabic, Czech, Danish, Finnish, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Norwegian, Polish, Swedish, Turkish
Extras: Blu-ray promo (1080p24, MPEG2. DD5.1 @ 640kbps – 1 min); 7669 Test Patterns (1080p24, MPEG2 – 1 min)
Restrictions: Rated M (Australian rating); Region Free

Posted in Blu-ray, Disc details, Giveaway | 2 Comments

The Fall

What the hell is it with The Fall? This is a glorious movie, made all the way back in 2006. It had David Fincher and Spike Jonze behind it (‘presented by’). It stars Lee Pace (from ‘Pushing Daisies‘) in a welcome dramatic role. It scores 8.0 on IMDB. But it isn’t available in Australia. It has apparently appeared on the screen in a few film festivals here, but not widely. This is a movie just waiting to make a few hundred thousand dollars for the DVD/Blu-ray distributor that releases it.

I purchased my copy from Amazon UK, where things are really cheap at the moment when bought in Australian dollars.

It is about Pace’s character, an invalid, spinning a fantastic story to a young girl, herself injured. The interaction between the two — always in the cramped confines of his hospital bed — that are the most extraordinary parts in my view. This is the girl:

Always with her arm in that nasty plaster cast. Pace, strung out, tells his story:

And every shot therein is breathakingly beautiful:

With the number of long shots, Blu-ray treatment is vital:

Twice, now, I’ve put this movie on ‘just want to show you the opening sequence’, which is black and white, super slow motion, choreographed to Beethoven’s 7th, 2nd Movement, and found that we still had it going a half hour later.

Posted in Blu-ray, Cinema | 1 Comment