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When it comes to extracting, converting and injecting HDR10+ or Dolby Vision metadata into a static HDR10 video, I wouldn't have a clue. Is there a GUI-friendly method of doing it these days? If so, is it even a good idea? Would the results remain accurate?
The new 4K release of Heat has quite dark day-time scenes. I haven't looked into it yet, but there is a 2160p WEB-DL from Amazon available with HDR10+. Was wondering whether it might improve things if that metadata could be pinched and injected into the 4K disc.
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Dv isn't magic, all if does is looks at the TV and asks "can you handle 1000+ nits? No? Then let's map that to 400"
It doesn't drastically change colour or brightness it just says to stop things being blown out, the exact same thing 10+ does.
As someone who has all the formats on their OLED there is nothing in them for the dynamic tone mapping.
Heat was ruined by Mann as he is against preservation and is all about revisionism.
The dark scenes won't be lifted unless you make an fanedit and hope the detail is not crushed beyond recovery
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I have an LG so I can only do DV and HDR10, but after calibrating both there's almost no noticeable difference as far as tone mapping. HDR10 looks just fine and you'd only notice the minimal benefit of dynamic tone mapping doing a direct side-by-side comparison.
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On an Lg it will work to battle the ABL thing they have a little