His movies are shot on film, so there is no resolution. However, he estimates the IMAX film can be scanned UP TO 18K before the quality difference is non-existent.
@@Ryanb37773The fuck? This is 70mm Imax which is 18k resolution originally when projected. Even on TV screens this looks better than any digitally shot films.
HDR recoloring makes this entire scene totally different and more accurate coloring. Makes the scene more clear and pop out than the original footage BluRay.
@@officialaustenmorpho3224 says the guy typing on his phone. I own a gigabyte M27q monitor. Vesa certified HDR , freesynch, 170 hertz refresh rate, 1440p 0.5ms latency. I can actually see the HDR colors.
It’s insane to me that they actually flipped a real semi truck. If The Dark Knight were made today, it would surely have been a digital truck being flipped, and therefor not nearly as incredible.
Nolan is too into practical effects to consider cgi for such scenes. I was worried what he would do for Oppenheimer when it was announced he would direct
This video one of the very few that is available in the latest "AV1" codec on RU-vid. If you're watching in 8K HDR on an AV1 supported device, you'll get an average video bitrate of over 60mbps!
@@halikular then your device doesn't have hardware for AV1. Because AV1 is decoded by GPU. If it's been decoded on CPU, then it is software decoding instead of hardware decoding, thus the bad performance.
You recently posted an 8K clip of the opening scene (which has been taken down). That clip had the original sound mix similar to the one released in theatres. The home media sound mix is not the same so i was wondering if you could help in getting off the film with that sound mix.
Back then There was and still is no movie theatre in my town and i waited for this movie to come in HBO channel and when I saw coming soon in HBO trailer I was very very happy i can't explain. I saw this movie in HBO 9:00pm to 12:00pm alone I remember my parents telling me sleep don't watch tv u got exams tomorrow but I lowered the volume turn off the lights and watching.
Am I the only one who laughs when he says "Could you please just give me a minute?" The biggest baddie of them all being all cordial like saying the word, please.
I was homeless in Chicago and I was in that Starbucks when they filmed the dark Knight this scene !!!! But I was asleep in a chair with my laptop in my laptop so I didn't see this happen :( 😞
0:31 is shown one of the best part of Christopher Nolan - attention to the details. That's why I still love Christopher Nolan's films and will forever 💯
@@amitavasengupta5580 Of dialogue heavy, low CGI action films? I dunno. Top Gun took off and let it’s foot off the throttle. It even had a tear jerker scene. The Dark Knight is definitely more quotable though. I’ll give it that.
@@morganbrown392 Top Gun Maverick and Top Gun are fabulous movies so are the Bourne and Mission Impossible series I wanted to say that The Dark Knight in addition to being a great action movie had great philosophical values like Batman's moral and ethical dilemmas, his strong sense of no kill philosophy and establishment of order like helping Harvey Dent to capture criminals and put them behind bars to the Joker's absolute anarchy and madness. The clash between the Batman and the Joker summarised in the Joker's own words "this is what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object" The Dark Knight gives food to thought. It's much more complex.
Tbh, this is my motivation video. I assume Joker as IIT(our toughest education system on whole world) and which I would be fall up but never give up until I fight it
Well movies that were shot in IMAX-70mm have a resolution pixelation at around 12-18K, so I'm guessing that's it digital intermediate of Nolan's IMAX movies are 8K Di's *(Digital Intermediates)*
@@BadassMoFo. I'm pretty sure he does the digital versions at 6k, in an interview he talked about seeing Inception in a 70mm theatre because they did it in 6k. But most recently with Dunkirk and Tenet he's done it all chemically, preserving the 16k res of the 70mm and 70mm horizontal film.
@@icydec3346- if a movie is shot in 35mm film, the digitally equivalent resolution of it would be between 5K to 6K, and if a movie is shot in 65mm film, than it would be 12K resolution and again, if a movie is shot with 70mm IMAX film, than it's true resolution would be between 16-18K. But a movie that was shot I'm 8K or higher has edited effects on it, then sometimes the movie would kinda get downscaled since the movie has either CGI/VFX and even color grading of the movie can sometimes cause that. Reasons why I know this is because Guardians of The Galaxy: Vol 2 (2017) was shot with RED 8K cameras and most movies that are filmed and shot at that resolution would usually have a 4K Di *(Digital Intermediate)* for the most part, right? Well that wasn't the case for it, since Guardians of The Galaxy: Vol 2 (2017) had a shit ton of usage of special effects that was force-rendered into a 2K Di *(Digital Intermediate)*
@@BadassMoFo. I'm not sure what you're getting at. Is that not basically what I said? Nolan used to do the intermediate in 6k, but now he and his editor use a feature in Avid that marks all the cuts and sorts them with the film rolls. Allowing the film developers to make those same edits but right on the film.