Read on another thread that HD DVD "native" film movies are mastered @ 1080p/60 and I wanted to verify this.
Most Blu-ray "native" film movies are mastered at 1080p/24, which would not produce judder when received by a display with 1080p/24, 2:2 pulldown at 48Hz or 3:3 pulldown at 72Hz, etc. capability.
Paul
mhafner
02-02-07, 01:15 PM
1080p/24 (1080p/60 would be brain dead anyway wasting bits on all the repeated frames).
haulin oats
02-02-07, 02:57 PM
1080p/24 (1080p/60 would be brain dead anyway wasting bits on all the repeated frames).
I think he means 1080p @ 60hz, not frames
i think by "native - film" he means "video". not sure though.
GlennRW
02-02-07, 04:17 PM
i think by "native - film" he means "video". not sure though.
I think native as in recorded in 1080P.
aaronwt
02-02-07, 04:36 PM
It's recorded in 1080P24 isn't it?
I think by Native Film he means Cannibal Holocaust. :D
mhafner
02-02-07, 08:24 PM
I think he means 1080p @ 60hz, not frames
He said mastered at 1080p so 60Hz means 60 frames for film content. Film is not interlaced. In case he meant 1080i@60 Hz, no, it's not mastered like that if it's a 24 fps film source. At least not so far. There are older film based HD transfers around at 1080i 60Hz, though.
eapleitez
02-03-07, 12:05 AM
You guys are confusing a simple answer.
HD DVDs are mastered at 1080p24.
phansson
02-03-07, 12:10 AM
I am under the impression that both Blu Ray and HD DVD's are on the DISC at 1080p/24hz.
polyh3dron
02-03-07, 03:49 AM
I think he means 1080p @ 60hz, not frames
60hz and 60FPS are one in the same.
kschmit2
02-03-07, 04:51 AM
Neither the BD specs, not the HD DVD specs support video encoded at 1080p60.
So that should settle it.