2018-01-07, 05:42 AM
Something I wanted to do since I first saw this movie. The desaturated look is absolutely not my thing. Luckily the color is still there and just needs to be seduced to show itself.
Played around for a while to get the ideal compromise with a blanket 3D LUT and am now at a point where I am kinda satisfied.
Here's a screenshot comparison: http://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/128273
Since the saturation is so low in the original, there's lots of obvious chroma blocking when raising the saturation, which is why I apply a grainplate for each RGB channel separately. This results in some extreme grain/noise in some areas where there is strong chroma contrast, but I actually kinda like that. Looks better than the blocking, anyway.
Here's a sample (across entire movie, spoiler warning, done with SelectRangeEvery): https://mega.nz/#!lzpUSRRJ!TTzofwfOK4WaK...NM8R8UGBM8
I only encoded that one with Adobe Media Encoder, so don't expect great quality. Should give you a fair idea what to expect color-wise though. And in the beginning scenes you can see some of that chroma grain acting up which I mentioned above.
Final encode will be done by applying the 3D LUT through ffmpeg in 16-bit, then piping into and encoding with 10-bit x264. If someone wants a blu-ray compatible encode, I'll include the .avs-file, grainplate, 3D LUT and a .bat script using ffmpeg for the LUT application and piping into x264 (that took some tinkering to get it to work), so you can just make your own version with your own encoding settings. I personally don't have a Blu Ray player, so I don't care about compatibility much.
Audio will be the lossless audio from the Blu Ray transcoded to FLAC.
This is pretty much finished, just need to find good encode settings and encode. I'll probably aim at a bitrate between 15 and 20 Mbps, to preserve the beautiful grain acting up.
If anyone has suggestions for further audio tracks or anything, let me know.
P.S. Should I classify this as fanedit as I am not technically preserving anything (other than the color)?
Played around for a while to get the ideal compromise with a blanket 3D LUT and am now at a point where I am kinda satisfied.
Here's a screenshot comparison: http://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/128273
Since the saturation is so low in the original, there's lots of obvious chroma blocking when raising the saturation, which is why I apply a grainplate for each RGB channel separately. This results in some extreme grain/noise in some areas where there is strong chroma contrast, but I actually kinda like that. Looks better than the blocking, anyway.
Here's a sample (across entire movie, spoiler warning, done with SelectRangeEvery): https://mega.nz/#!lzpUSRRJ!TTzofwfOK4WaK...NM8R8UGBM8
I only encoded that one with Adobe Media Encoder, so don't expect great quality. Should give you a fair idea what to expect color-wise though. And in the beginning scenes you can see some of that chroma grain acting up which I mentioned above.
Final encode will be done by applying the 3D LUT through ffmpeg in 16-bit, then piping into and encoding with 10-bit x264. If someone wants a blu-ray compatible encode, I'll include the .avs-file, grainplate, 3D LUT and a .bat script using ffmpeg for the LUT application and piping into x264 (that took some tinkering to get it to work), so you can just make your own version with your own encoding settings. I personally don't have a Blu Ray player, so I don't care about compatibility much.
Audio will be the lossless audio from the Blu Ray transcoded to FLAC.
This is pretty much finished, just need to find good encode settings and encode. I'll probably aim at a bitrate between 15 and 20 Mbps, to preserve the beautiful grain acting up.
If anyone has suggestions for further audio tracks or anything, let me know.
P.S. Should I classify this as fanedit as I am not technically preserving anything (other than the color)?