sknath wrote:
Again I reiterate, Color settings can be changed... and I am sure this dvd has enough color information already embedded within it, that would make it fit for tuning by the user...
Color perception is purely a subjective matter, unlike appearance of Flicker / combing artifacts that arise from wrongly encoded dvds !
For example, a progressively encoded DVD like Kati Patang (EVP ) has poor colors, but that can be changed by chaging the RGB or HUV settings..or any other settings...
However its interlaced component, will have that discernable combing artifact or blurring artifact (in whichever mode you see), notwithstanding the poor color it may also have.. Try and adjust the color.. you will end up making the combing artifacts more discernable !
1) Ideally, we wouldn't have to adjust anything on our TVs/computer monitors to see the proper image. The color on EVP's progressive discs is a little faded, but not too much, and the image is otherwise good enough to watch without adjustments IMO.
2) Progressive encoding isn't the be all and end all of DVD authoring. Just look at how soft the image is. See how flattened the blacks look. The image has also been artificially sharpened. I can only imagine what kind of motion artifacts may be present.
I keep hope alive that BEI will recapture its former glory. Does anyone else think that even older movies like Golmaal look better than this?
:sus:
Edited By DragunR2 on 1063404547