2018-06-29, 10:20 PM
Here's what I obtain with Mission: impossible, which I just saw on 35mm last night, June 28th: the Blu-ray, overall, is quite faithfull. It's in the ballpark. I feel it needs to be warmer on the color temperature and probably a couple points towards the green side on the color spectrum to cut back a little on the red.
Blu-ray/RipBot (-5, 0.9, -1, 0.9)
Too pink on the Blu-ray. Not enough on the remaster.
Too pink on the Blu-ray. Not enough on the remaster.
Both in the same ballpark. Better looking on the remaster that cuts back on the pink skintone but still some on the cheeks. That's good.
Better contrast on the Blu-ray. A bit better colors on the remaster, especially on Cruise's leather jacket.
A scene that should look quite warm, so definitely better on the Blu-ray. Way too cool on the remaster, and the plant which Bluray.com enjoyed so much in here is nowhere as noticeable on 35mm. It's not supposed to stick out the way it does on the remaster.
A bit too warm on the Blu-ray, way too cool on the remaster.
Blu-ray here is dead on.
Blu-ray needs a bit more warmth or saturation for a better looking blue, but not to the point of the remaster which is way too colorfull.
The blu-ray is quite dead on here. The remaster makes the green drapes behind way too noticeable. This is actually one of the scenes I tested before testing my tweaking on the whole film, and thus why I reduced saturation to 0.9 instead of the usual 1.0.
Both in the same ballpark here, with a better looking warmth on the remaster...
... except that right after, when the Blu-ray remains consistent, the remaster is suddenly way too colorfull.
Blu-ray is a better match to the 35mm here.
Blu-ray is a better match to the 35mm here.
Blu-ray is a better match to the 35mm here, obviously. I don't even understand how the remaster can look that dark and weird...
... and even wierder here.
Blu-ray is way better here.
Blu-ray is a bit better here, but both fail in getting the city landscape in the backgroud right: it should be green. Definitely not blue.
Here, the door window is supposed to be mustard color, definitely not green. Blu-ray is better.
Blu-ray is dead on in its ability to give us the proper shade of cyan blue in the lensflares. The remaster is so wrong!
Blu-ray is dead on with that warm dusk lighting in this scene.
Blu-ray is dead on with that purple color on the umbrellas on both sides of the conversation.
Blu-ray is dead on with that orangy sunset.
Of course, my observations cannot take into account the way the actual HDR UHD Blu-ray looks, 'cause I don't have the equipment to see it that way. Nevertheless, I believe the Blu-ray colors, with a little tweaking, should be applied to the remaster using the color match thingy to give it a proper look.
Blu-ray/RipBot (-5, 0.9, -1, 0.9)
Too pink on the Blu-ray. Not enough on the remaster.
Too pink on the Blu-ray. Not enough on the remaster.
Both in the same ballpark. Better looking on the remaster that cuts back on the pink skintone but still some on the cheeks. That's good.
Better contrast on the Blu-ray. A bit better colors on the remaster, especially on Cruise's leather jacket.
A scene that should look quite warm, so definitely better on the Blu-ray. Way too cool on the remaster, and the plant which Bluray.com enjoyed so much in here is nowhere as noticeable on 35mm. It's not supposed to stick out the way it does on the remaster.
A bit too warm on the Blu-ray, way too cool on the remaster.
Blu-ray here is dead on.
Blu-ray needs a bit more warmth or saturation for a better looking blue, but not to the point of the remaster which is way too colorfull.
The blu-ray is quite dead on here. The remaster makes the green drapes behind way too noticeable. This is actually one of the scenes I tested before testing my tweaking on the whole film, and thus why I reduced saturation to 0.9 instead of the usual 1.0.
Both in the same ballpark here, with a better looking warmth on the remaster...
... except that right after, when the Blu-ray remains consistent, the remaster is suddenly way too colorfull.
Blu-ray is a better match to the 35mm here.
Blu-ray is a better match to the 35mm here.
Blu-ray is a better match to the 35mm here, obviously. I don't even understand how the remaster can look that dark and weird...
... and even wierder here.
Blu-ray is way better here.
Blu-ray is a bit better here, but both fail in getting the city landscape in the backgroud right: it should be green. Definitely not blue.
Here, the door window is supposed to be mustard color, definitely not green. Blu-ray is better.
Blu-ray is dead on in its ability to give us the proper shade of cyan blue in the lensflares. The remaster is so wrong!
Blu-ray is dead on with that warm dusk lighting in this scene.
Blu-ray is dead on with that purple color on the umbrellas on both sides of the conversation.
Blu-ray is dead on with that orangy sunset.
Of course, my observations cannot take into account the way the actual HDR UHD Blu-ray looks, 'cause I don't have the equipment to see it that way. Nevertheless, I believe the Blu-ray colors, with a little tweaking, should be applied to the remaster using the color match thingy to give it a proper look.