No. You would be suprised.Originally posted by The Architect
I'm just wondering why they would use JPEG as the codec. Doesn't JPEG introduce artifacts during compression?
IMAX is 10 times the resolution of 35mm. 35mm film offers 10,000 lines of resoluton. I think WIKI mabe mistaken.The Architect:wrote
Looking at IMAX - Wikipedia, it seems that IMAX has a resolution of 10,000 x 7,000 pixels (70 megapixels)!
exactly what I was looking for and follows what I researched thanks.Originally posted by THX1138
Film has higher resolution than blu-ray. Film offers 10,000 lines of horizontal resolution compared to the 1920 X 1080 lines that consumer blu-ray offers. Digital Commercial Cinema uses the same resolution as blue-ray, but instead of using MPEG 2 or AVCHD codecs, Digital Commercial Cinema uses the JPEG 2000 video codec. The Digital Commercial Cinema projector also does a little up-scalling to bring the final output to 2048 x 1080.
So theres the final answer.
Film is analog so there are no real "pixels." However, based on converted measures, a 35mm frame has 3 to 12 million pixels, depending on the stock, lens, and shooting conditions. An HD frame has 2 million pixels, measured using 1920 x 1080 scan lines. With this difference, 35mm appears vastly superior to HD.The Architect: wrote
OK, I did some more research and some people say that there is around 20 million pixels in the best quality 35 mm film on the best equipment. These figures are still lower than what you claim to be achievable in film. We might as well count how many grains there are as well...