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  1. Embed this notice
    simsa03 (simsa03@gnusocial.jp)'s status on Sunday, 30-Nov-2025 15:31:36 JST simsa03 simsa03
    That explains a lot why modern film/video looks so visually unsatisfactory and aligns it with the boring contemporary video game imagery: The cleanliness of the images results from grain- and texture reduction.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XptD8ohC77w
    (with links to papers in the description)
    In conversation about 3 months ago from web permalink

    Attachments

    1. Why Movies Don’t Look Real Anymore
      from Jimmy on Film
      Check out my blog post, learn more about how to properly grain your footage and download physically accurate grain assets: https://www.film-match.com/blog/ad...
    • Embed this notice
      simsa03 (simsa03@gnusocial.jp)'s status on Monday, 01-Dec-2025 02:12:36 JST simsa03 simsa03
      in reply to
      I remember how shallow the then new CDs of the late 1980s with their 16-bit engineered recordings sounded. No overtones to the harmonic first, a flat sound that forced recording to accentuate the pitches: the highs, the bass-lines, the beat. The sound never felt voluminous.

      This changed a bit with the advent of 32-bit recording in the early 1990s, but then the new listening habit of clear high pitches, bass- and rhythm driven groundlayer, repetitious melodies rarely going beyond a third or quart, had already influenced listening and markets.

      The emphasis on almost violent expressivity over phrasing and modulation can best be heard by comparing Dolly Parton's tender "I will always love you" (1973) with Whitney Houston's paroxysmal rendition (1992).

      Thus, looking back, I feel like noticing some parallels in music as in cinematography. In both depth and nuance has been lost, replaced by harsh contrasts, and the attempt to balance the feeling of sensory deprivation by adding effects.

      Obviously it had the side effect – welcomed by the industry – of nudging people to purchase even more of the same sensory malnutrition to satisfy their hunger.
      In conversation about 3 months ago permalink

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