Stranger Things creator says turn off "garbage" settings

(screenrant.com)

108 points | by 1970-01-01 6 hours ago

33 comments

  • pupppet 2 hours ago
    The fact that I have to turn on closed captioning to understand anything tells me these producers have no idea what we want and shouldn’t be telling us what settings to use.
    • joquarky 42 minutes ago
      One problem is that the people mixing the audio already know what is being said:

      Top-down processing

      (or more specifically, top-down auditory perception)

      This refers to perception being driven by prior knowledge, expectations, and context rather than purely by sensory input. When you already know the dialog, your brain projects that knowledge onto the sound and experiences it as “clear.”

    • rtpg 1 hour ago
      I have the same sound issues with a lot of stuff, my current theory at this point is that TVs have gotten bigger and we're further away from them but speakers have stayed kinda shitty... but things are being mixed by people using headphones or otherwise good sound equipment

      it's very funny how when watching a movie on my macbook pro it's better for me to just use HDMI for the video to my TV but keep on using my MBP speaker for the audio, since the speakers are just much better.

      • mhitza 43 minutes ago
        Sure, but it's the job of whoever is mastering the audio to take such constraints into account.
      • greatgib 58 minutes ago
        It is a well known issue: https://zvox.com/blogs/news/why-can-t-i-hear-dialogue-on-tv-...

        I don't find the source anymore but I think that I saw that it was even a kind of small conspiracy on tv streaming so that you set your speakers louder and then the advertisement time arrive you will hear them louder than your movie.

        Officially it is just that they switch to a better encoding for ads (like mpeg2 to MPEG-4 for DVB) but unofficially for the money as always...

        • nutjob2 40 minutes ago
          I think the issue is dynamic range rather than a minor conspiracy.

          Film makers want to preserve dynamic range so they can render sounds both subtle and with a lot of punch, preserving detail, whereas ads just want to be heard as much as possible.

          Ads will compress sound so it sounds uniform, colorless and as clear and loud for a given volume as possible.

    • retrac 1 hour ago
      Perhaps a mixing issue on your end? Multi-channel audio has the dialog track separated. So you can increase the volume of the dialog if you want. Unfortunately I think there is variability in hardware (and software players) in how to down-mix, which sometimes results in background music in the surround channels drowning out the dialog in the centre channel.
      • josephg 2 minutes ago
        Is there a way to do this in vlc? I run into this problem constantly - especially when 5.1 audio gets down mixed to my stereo setup.
      • mikepurvis 1 hour ago
        It's reasonable for the 5.1 mix to have louder atmosphere and be more dependent on directionality for the viewer to pick the dialog out of the center channel. However, all media should also be supplying a stereo mix where the dialog is appropriately boosted.
        • CoffeeOnWrite 1 hour ago
          My PS4 Slim was not capable of this at the device level. An individual app could choose to expose the choice of audio format, but many do not :(
      • ludicrousdispla 11 minutes ago
        It's an issue even in theaters and is the main reason I prefer to watch new releases at home on DVD (Dune I saw in the theater, Dune 2 I watched at home.)
    • throw-12-16 1 hour ago
      Sounds like you are just using internal speakers.

      They are notorious for bad vocal range audio.

      I have a decent surround sound and had no issues at all.

    • redox99 55 minutes ago
      Never had an issue with Stranger Things. Maybe you're using the internal speakers?
      • KeplerBoy 23 minutes ago
        Most people do, I reckon.
    • pezezin 1 hour ago
      English is my second language and I always though my lack of understanding was a skill issue.

      Then I noticed that native speakers also complain.

      Then I started to watch YouTube channels, live TV and old movies, and I found out I could understand almost everything! (depending on the dialect)

      When even native speakers can't properly enjoy modern movies and TV shows, you know that something is very wrong...

      • UberFly 20 minutes ago
        I "upgraded" from a 10 year old 1080p Vizio to a 4K LG and the sound is the worst part of the experience. It was very basic and consistent with our old TV but now it's all over the place. It's now a mangled mess of audio that's hard to understand.
    • TheEaterOfSouls 1 hour ago
      I had the same thing with Severance (last show I watched, I don't watch many) but I'm deaf, so thought it was just that. Seemed like every other line of dialogue was actually a whisper, though. Is this how things are now?
      • lostlogin 1 hour ago
        Our tv’s sound is garbage and I was forced to buy a soundbar and got a Sonos one. Night mode seems to crush down the sound track. Loud bits are quieter and quiet bits are louder.

        Voice boost makes the dialogue louder.

        Everyone in the house loves these two settings and can tell when they are off.

    • TimorousBestie 1 hour ago
      My personal theory of the case is that mid-band hearing loss is more common than people want to admit and tends to go undiagnosed until old age.
      • worthless-trash 1 hour ago
        Just did a hearing test last week, still in the very good range.

        The sound is mud, we've just become accustomed.

  • tiku 1 minute ago
    And how about the content garbage? Not spoilering anything but man...
  • nwellinghoff 51 minutes ago
    He is absolutely right. The soap opera effect totally ruins the look of most movies. I still use a good old 1080p plasma on default. It always looks good
    • SOLAR_FIELDS 42 minutes ago
      I watched the most recent avatar and it was some HDR variant that had this effect turned up. It definitely dampens the experience. There’s something about that slightly fuzzed movement that just makes things on screen look better
  • kevinlearynet 5 hours ago
    All the settings in the world won't change the story.
    • epistasis 5 hours ago
      Careful what you wish for, or we might get AI-powered "Vibrant Story" filters that reduce 62 minutes of plot-less filler to a 5 minute summary of the only relevant points. Or that try to generate some logic to make the magic in the story make narrative sense.
      • 01100011 13 minutes ago
        I just said to a friend that the season 5 writing is so bad that I think AI would have done a better job. I hope someone tries that out once we get the final episode: Give an LLM the scripts for the first 4 seasons, the outcome frome the finale, and let it have a go and drafting a better season 5.

        And no, I'm not talking about the gay thing. The writing is simply atrocious. Numerous plot holes, leaps of reasoning, and terrible character interactions.

      • mikepurvis 1 hour ago
        Feed the five minute summary back in again to get a one minute summary:

        https://www.smbc-comics.com/comic/summary

      • citizenkeen 4 hours ago
        I would use this for most reality TV shows.
        • biglyburrito 4 hours ago
          You'd be better off simply not watching those shows.
      • tguvot 5 hours ago
        as opposite to AI-powered "Hyper Vibrant Story" filters that increase 5 minute of plot to 62 minutes of slop
        • epistasis 5 hours ago
          Much like a chain of email AI filters that turn short directions into full-fledged emails, that in turn get summarized into short directions on the receiving end.
          • smj-edison 1 hour ago
            It's a lossless process, right? right?
        • onraglanroad 5 hours ago
          Yes, once you have the 5 minute summary you can then extend it to however long your Uber is going to take to arrive!
  • freitasm 3 hours ago
    If only the directors didn't make everything so dark and hard to see. Also stopped messing with sound, making it impossible to hear dialogues.
    • jerlam 2 hours ago
      I'm surprised they didn't mention turning off closed captioning, because understanding the dialog is less important than experiencing the creator's intent.
      • etempleton 1 hour ago
        I haven’t experienced issues understanding dialogue in Stranger Things, for what it’s worth.
    • mystifyingpoi 15 minutes ago
      I've watched Silo season 2 and it is basically impossible to watch it during the day. Only at night, with brightness cranked up to 100%.
    • pupppet 2 hours ago
      Netflix shows in particular are ridiculously dark.
      • etempleton 1 hour ago
        Heavily compressed.
        • lostlogin 1 hour ago
          If you check it will say the resolution is AMAZING.

          Despite being a subscriber I pirate their shows to get some pixels.

          • gck1 32 minutes ago
            I have some *arrs on my server. Anything that comes from Netflix is bitstarved to death. If the same show is available on virtually any other streaming service, it will be at the very least twice the size.

            No other service does this.

            And for some reason, if HDR versions of their 1080p content are even more bitstarved than SDR.

          • bawolff 1 hour ago
            Things can be both high resolution and still low quality due to being overcompressed.
            • lostlogin 33 minutes ago
              While this is true, looking at it sometimes has quality so bad that I think the displayed resolution is just a complete lie.
            • bombcar 43 minutes ago
              I really wish they had to advertise streams at bitrate and not resolution.
              • layer8 31 minutes ago
                Bitrate still won’t tell you how bad the encoding is. There can be dramatic differences at the same or inverse bitrate.
        • joquarky 36 minutes ago
          Which is even worse since darker gradients seem to leave more visible compression artifacts.
    • throw-12-16 59 minutes ago
      Flatscreen TVs have terrible speakers, especially for speech.
  • avazhi 5 hours ago
    Thanks for the thought but from what I’ve heard from friends I’ll be keeping the final season unwatched just like I did with the last 2 episodes of GoT.
    • romanhn 1 hour ago
      I don't understand this at all. The episode 4 ending was up there with Dear Billy for me.
    • vunderba 55 minutes ago
      It's been a while - I remember liking the first two seasons. Season three felt a bit silly to me without going into much detail (we need a spoiler text wrapper for HN). Season four has a lot of "zombie-esque" stuff which just doesn't have near the dread horror that the first two seasons did IMHO. Haven't seen any of the final season.
    • layer8 28 minutes ago
      The first season was the only really good one.
    • CSSer 6 minutes ago
      It's almost like you're living in an alternate universe where everything is just a little bit better.
    • xenospn 5 hours ago
      It’s very bad.
      • 01100011 8 minutes ago
        All of the characters are constantly arguing with each other. The story line requires constant suspension of belief based on the endless succession of improbable events and improbable character behaviors. Contradictions with earlier episodes and even details within the same episode. It's really bad. I hope the final episode redeems it but I have my doubts. I want to have an LLM rewrite season 5 and see how much it improves.
      • redundantly 5 hours ago
        It really isn't. I keep seeing comparisons to the last seasons of Game of Thrones, but while there is a dip in quality this season, it is no where near as bad as what happened to GoT.
        • golfer 5 hours ago
          GoT got so bad that I don't really have any desire to watch any of the seasons ever again. Killed rewatchability.
          • prawn 2 hours ago
            I rewatched it in recent weeks and enjoyed all the bits that I enjoyed years ago during the first watch. The stories I found a bit tedious first time (High Sparrow plotline, Arya and faceless men) weren't as miserable; I think I was expecting them to drag on even more. My biggest grievance on the rewatch was just how poorly it's all tied up. I again enjoyed The Long Night through the lens of 'spectacle over military documentary'. The last season just felt like they wrote themselves into a corner and didn't have time and patience to see it through. By that point, actors were ready to move on, etc.
  • Shorel 49 minutes ago
    Anyone who mentions: "the soap opera effect" is someone who used to watch soap operas. The reason they dislike it, is their own bad taste.

    I like how it looks because it is "high quality videogame effect" for me. 60 hz, 120hz, 144hz, you only get this on a good videogame setup.

    • IggleSniggle 43 minutes ago
      Just because someone has different taste doesn't make it bad taste. Books have lower resolution still, and they evoke far greater imaginative leaps. For me, the magic lies in what is not shown; it helps aid the suspension of disbelief by requiring you imagination to do more work filling in the gaps.

      I'm an avid video game player, and while FPS and sports-adjacent games demand high framerates, I'm perfectly happy turning my render rates down to 40Hz or 30Hz on many games simply to conserve power. I generally prefer my own brain's antialiasing, I guess.

    • jeauxlb 44 minutes ago
      It is a well-known description for what each brand calls something different. As I wait in a physiotherapist office I am being subjected to a soap opera against my will. Many will have seen snippets of The Bold and the Beautiful without watching a single episode, but enough to know that it looks 'different'.
    • nntwozz 43 minutes ago
      The Godfather in 144hz with DNR and motion smoothing, just like Scorsese intended.
    • quasarj 36 minutes ago
      I call it the "British comedy effect". And it's awful, and if you like it, you're awful too, sorry to say.
    • echelon 35 minutes ago
      Films use cheap set dec and materials. They use lighting and makeup tricks.

      If you watch at a higher frame rate, the mistakes become obvious rather than melting into the frames. Humans look plastic and fake.

      The people that are masters of light and photography make intentional choices for a reason.

      You can cook your steak well done if you like, but that's not how you're supposed to eat it.

      A steak is not a burger. A movie is not a sports event or video game.

      • petesergeant 22 minutes ago
        > You can cook your steak well done if you like, but that's not how you're supposed to eat it.

        Did you read an interview with the cow’s creator?

  • ycombinatrix 5 hours ago
    The "soap opera" effect is real, I don't enjoy it.
    • vunderba 47 minutes ago
      The TrueMotion stuff drives me crazy. Chalk it up to being raised on movies filmed at 24fps, plus a heavy dose of FPS games (Wolf, Doom, Quake) as a kid, but frame rate interpolation instantly makes it feel less like a movie and more like I’m watching a weird “Let’s Play.”
    • laweijfmvo 5 hours ago
      christmas day, walked into a relative’s living room to watch football and the players were literally gliding across the screen. lol
    • emkoemko 1 hour ago
      for me it ruins cinematic content, for sports i don't mind
      • tartoran 52 minutes ago
        It ruins it for me as well but from my understanding many people can't tell the difference.
  • nntwozz 22 minutes ago
    I read a lot of comments here that freeze my blood, what needs to be said is that there is something called creative intent.

    For those unfamiliar with the term you should watch Vincent Teoh @ HDTVTest:

    https://www.youtube.com/hdtvtest

    Creative intent refers to the goal of displaying content on a TV precisely as the original director or colorist intended it to be seen in the studio or cinema.

    A lot of work is put into this and the fact that many TVs nowadays come with terrible default settings doesn't help. We have a whole generation who actually prefer the colors all maxed out with motion smoothing etc. turned to 11 but that's like handing the Mona Lisa to some rando down the street to improve it with crayons.

    At the end of the day it's disrespectful to the creator and the artwork itself.

  • lostlogin 1 hour ago
    It’s funny to read about respecting content on that site, which has no respect for their own content.

    Yes, I usually run add blockers, Pihole etc, I’m away from home and temporarily without my filters.

  • astrange 1 hour ago
    Dynamic Contrast = Low is needed on LG TVs to actually enable HDR scene metadata or something weird like that. 60->120hz motion smoothing is also useful on OLEDs to prevent visual judder; you want either that or black frame insertion. I have no idea what Super Resolution actually does, it never seems to do anything.

    Also, as a digital video expert I will allow you to leave motion smoothing on.

    • emkoemko 1 hour ago
      noo motion smoothing is terrible unless you like soap operas and not cinema, black frame insertion is to lower even more the pixel persistence which really does nothing for 24fps content which already has a smooth blur built in to the image, the best is setting your tv to 120hz so that your 24fps fits evenly and you don't get 3:2 pulldown judder
    • esperent 1 hour ago
      I assume super resolution is for upscaling old content. Try it on a 240p YouTube video and see what it does there.
  • minimaxir 5 hours ago
    Game of Thrones Season 8 was lambasted for having an episode that was mostly in darkness...in 2019.

    You'd think television production would be calibrated for the median watcher's TV settings by now.

  • thrownawaysz 5 hours ago
    Implying that makes a bad season better. When you watch thrash settings doesn't really matter
    • Quarrel 5 hours ago
      I don't think it implies that at all.

      It is perfectly understandable that the people who really care about how their work was colour-graded, then suggest you turn off all the features that shit all over that work. Similarly for the other settings he mentions.

      Don't get me wrong, I haven't seen the first season, so won't watch this, but creators / artists do and should care about this stuff.

      Of course, people can watch things in whatever dreaded settings they want, but lots of TVs default to bad settings, so awareness is good.

  • abtinf 1 hour ago
    Is there a setting to make it stop being orange and blue? Such color grading is an instant tell the show (or video game) is creatively bankrupt trash.
    • nntwozz 40 minutes ago
      Mad Max: Fury Road has entered the chat.
  • xxdiamondxx 5 hours ago
    Probably a good time to plug Filmmaker mode!
    • Uehreka 5 hours ago
      From what I’ve read, you want to make sure that the setting is spelled FILMMAKER MODE (in all caps) with a (TM) symbol, since that means that the body who popularized the setting has approved whatever the manufacturer does when you turn that on (so if there’s a setting called “Cinephile Mode” that could mean anything).

      With that being said, I’ve definitely seen TVs that just don’t have FILMMAKER MODE or have it, but it doesn’t seem to apply to content from sources like Chromecast. The situation is far from easy to get a handle on.

    • elondaits 5 hours ago
      Typically “Game” mode, on TVs, turns off post processing, to avoid the extra frames of lag it causes.
      • astrange 1 hour ago
        That doesn't necessarily mean it looks good or is tuned well, just that it has lower latency.
  • tzs 5 hours ago
    My TV is from around 2017 and some of those settings definitely suck on it. I'm curious if they have improved any of them on newer TVs.

    Here's how bad it was in 2017. One of the earliest things I watched on that TV was "Guardians of the Galaxy" on some expanded basic cable channel. The fight between Peter and Gamora over the orb looked very jerky, like it was only at about 6 fps. I found some reviews of the movie on YouTube that included clips of that fight and it looked great on them, so I know that this wasn't some artistic choice of the director that I just didn't like. Some Googling told me about the motion enhancement settings of the TV, and how they often suck. I had DVRed the movie, and with those settings off the scene looked great when I watched it again.

  • zzo38computer 3 hours ago
    I thought there is such a thing (although probably some TV sets do not have) as "film maker mode" to do it according to the film maker's intention (although I don't know all of the details, so I do even know how well it would work). "Dolby Vision Movie Dark" is something that I had not heard of.

    (However, modern TV sets are often filled with enough other junk that maybe you will not want all of these things anyways)

  • lawgimenez 5 hours ago
    Wow that CGI creature looks bad. I thought it was from the Stranger Things game.
  • xnx 5 hours ago
    I hope AI tools allow for better fan edits. There's enough of a foundation and source footage to redo the later episodes of Stranger Things ... The Matrix ... etc.
    • deckar01 1 hour ago
      I need to test the new audio demuxing model out for fan edits. Separating music, dialog, and sound effects into stems would make continuity much easier. Minor rewrites would be interesting, but considering Tron Ares botched AI rewrite dubbing so bad I’m not holding my breath.
    • oopwhat 1 minute ago
      [dead]
    • mikestorrent 5 hours ago
      Yes, I think that this is one place to be very bullish on AI content creation. There are many people with fantastic visions for beautiful stories that they will never be in a position to create the traditional way; oftentimes with better stories than what is actually produced officially.

      (You ever think about how many fantastic riffs have been wasted with cringe lyrics?)

      • bigbuppo 2 hours ago
        Nothing is stopping you right now from buying or finding or creating a catalog of loops and samples that you can use to create your own Artistic Vision[tm]. The technology exists and has existed for decades, no AI required.
      • __del__ 2 hours ago
        i often think about all the music ruined by self obsessed dorks singing soulless middle school poetry, and it's the main application of AI i'm quite excited for
  • metadat 2 hours ago
    What about the "AI Enhancement" settings? Are those still good?
  • api 5 hours ago
    Totally agreed. I read somewhere that the only place these features help is sports. They should not be defaults. They make shows and films look like total crap.
    • robomartin 5 hours ago
      Actually, they do not belong anywhere. If you look at the processing pipeline necessary to, for example, shoot and produce modern sporting events in both standard and high dynamic range, the last thing you want is a television that makes its own decisions based on some random setting that a clueless engineer at the manufacturer thought would be cool to have. Companies spend millions of dollars (hundreds of millions in the case of broadcasters) to deliver technically accurate data to televisions.

      These settings are the television equivalent of clickbait. They are there to get people to say "Oh, wow!" at the store and buy it. And, just like clickbait, once they have what they clicked on, the experience ranges from lackluster and distorted to being scammed.

      • lanthade 5 hours ago
        As someone who has built multi-camera live broadcast systems and operated them you are 100% correct. There is color correction, image processing, and all the related bits. Each of these units costs many times more and is far more capable with much higher quality (in the right hands) than what is included in even the most high end TV.
      • kevin_thibedeau 5 hours ago
        They're the equivalent of the pointless DSP audio modes on 90's A/V receivers. Who was ever going to use "Concert Hall", "Jazz Club", or "Rock Concert" with distracting reverb and echo added to ruin the sound.
      • zzo38computer 2 hours ago
        I think it is helpful to have settings that you can change, although the default settings should probably match those intended by whoever made the movie or TV show that you are watching, according to the specification of the video format. (The same applies to audio, etc.)

        This way, you should not need to change them unless you want nonstandard settings for whatever reason.

  • robomartin 5 hours ago
    Yeah, televisions come full of truly destructive settings. I think part of the genesis of this virus is the need for TV's to stand out at the store. Brands and models are displayed side-by-side. The only way to stand out is to push the limits of over-enhancement along every possible axis (resolution, color, motion, etc.).

    Since consumers are not trained to critically discern image and video quality, the "Wow!" often wins the sale. This easily explains the existence of local dimming solutions (now called miniLED or some other thing). In a super bright Best Buy or Walmart viewing environment they can look fantastic (although, if you know what to look for you can see the issues). When you get that same TV home and watch a movie in the dark...oh man, the halos jump off the screen. Now they are starting to push "RGB miniLED" as if that is going to fix basic optics/physics issues.

    And don't get me started on horrible implementations of HDR.

    This is clearly a case of the average consumer not knowing enough (they should not have to be experts, BTW) and effectively getting duped by marketing.

  • throwatdem12311 5 hours ago
    Without even clicking I know he’s talking about motion smoothing.

    Went to the in-laws over the holidays and the motion smoothing on the otherwise very nice LG tv was absolutely atrocious.

    My sister had her Nintendo Switch connected to it and the worst thing was not the low resolution game on the 4k display - it was the motion smoothing. Absolutely unbearable. Sister was complaining about input lag and it was most definitey caused by the motion smoothing.

    I keep my own TV on game mode regardless of the content because otherwise all the extra “features” - which includes more than just motion smoothing - pretty much destroys picture quality universally no matter what I’m watching.

  • perryizgr8 1 hour ago
    > It’s gonna destroy the color, and it’s not the filmmaker’s intent.

    I don't care about the "filmmaker's intent", because it is my TV. I will enable whatever settings look best to me.

  • brador 2 hours ago
    My screen, my settings, my experience.
  • kritiko 5 hours ago
    This article seems to imply that the default settings are the manufacturer recommended ones for streaming movies - is that bad ux? Should Netflix be able to push recommended settings to your tv?
    • spaceywilly 4 hours ago
      The problem is it can be subjective. Some people really like the “smooth motion” effect, especially if they never got used to watching 24fps films back in the day. Others, like me, think seeing stuff at higher refresh rates just looks off. It may be a generational thing. Same goes for “vivid color” mode and those crazy high contrast colors. People just like it more.

      On the other hand, things that are objective like color calibration, can be hard to “push down” to each TV because they might vary from set to set. Apple TV has a cool feature where you can calibrate the output using your phone camera, it’s really nifty. Lots of people comment on how good the picture on my TV looks, it’s just because it’s calibrated. It makes a big difference.

      Anyways, while I am on my soap box, one reason I don’t have a Netflix account any more is because you need the highest tier to get 4k/hdr content. Other services like Apple TV and Prime give everyone 4k. I feel like that should be the standard now. It’s funny to see this thread of suggestions for people to get better picture, when many viewers probably can’t even get 4k/hdr.

  • eudamoniac 5 hours ago
    The soap opera effect is only a problem because no one is used to it. Higher FPS is objectively better. These motion interpolation settings are now ubiquitous and pretty much nobody cares about said effect anymore, which is great, because maybe now we can start having movies above 24FPS.

    To preempt replies: ask yourself why 24 frames per second is optimal for cinema instead of just being an ancient spec that everyone got used to.

    • kec 39 minutes ago
      You’d need to actually support your assertion that higher FPS is objectively better, especially higher FPS via motion interpolation which inherently degrades the image by inserting blurry duplicated frames.

      People are “used to” high FPS content: Live TV, scripted TV shot on video (not limited to only soap operas), video games, most YouTube content, etc are all at 30-60FPS. It’d be worth asking yourself why so many people continue to prefer the aesthetic of a lower framerates when the “objectively better” higher FPS has been available and moderately prevalent for quite some time.

    • techjamie 4 hours ago
      Personally, I have no issue watching things that are shot at 60fps (like YouTube videos, even live action) but the motion smoothing on TV shows makes it look off to me.

      I dunno if it's just a me thing, but I wonder if a subconscious part of my brain is pegging the motion smoothed content as unnatural movement and dislikes it as a result.

      • kstrauser 3 hours ago
        The motion smoother also has to guess which parts of the picture to modify. Is the quarterback throwing the ball the important part? The team on the sidelines? The people in the stands? The camera on wires zooming around over the field to get bird’s eye views? When it guesses wrong and enhances the wrong thing, it looks weird.

        Also imagine the hand of a clock rotating at 5 minutes’ worth of angle per frame, and 1 frame per second. If you watched that series of pictures, your brain might still fill in that the hand is moving in a circle every 12 seconds.

        Now imagine smoothing synthesizing an extra 59 frames per second. If it’s only consider the change between 2 frames, it might show a bright spot moving in a straight line between the 12 and 1 position, then 1 and 2, and so on. Instead of a circle, the circle of the hand would be tracing a dodecagon. That’s fine, but it’s not how your brain knows clocks are supposed to move.

        Motion smoothing tries to do its best to generate extra detail that doesn’t exist and we’re a long way from the tech existing for a TV to be able to do that well in realtime. Until then, it’s going to be weird and unnatural.

        Film shot at 60FPS? Sure. Shot at 24 and slopped up to 60? Nah, I’ll pass.

    • etempleton 1 hour ago
      Films rely on 24 fps or, rather, low motion resolution to help suspend disbelief. There are things that the viewer are not meant to see or at least see clearly. Yes, part of that specific framerate is nostalgia and what the audience expects a movie to look like, but it holds a purpose.

      Higher frame rates are superior for shooting reality. But for something that is fictional it helps the audience suspend their disbelief.

      • eviks 4 minutes ago
        Does the suspension break in games, which are not reality? Is there any evidence lower quality is better?
      • worthless-trash 47 minutes ago
        I'm not sure I buy that it helps the audience suspend their disbelief.

        If it did horror films would be filmed at higher frame rates for extra scares.

        Humans have a long history of suspending belief in both oral and written lore. I think that 'fps' may be as functionally equivalent as the santa clause stories, fun for kids but the adults need to pick up the bill.

    • emkoemko 1 hour ago
      easy... because 24fps has that dream like feel to it.. second you go past that it starts to look like people on a stage and you loose the illusion... i couldn't watch the hobbit because of it

      movies above 24fps won't become a thing, it looks terrible and should be left for documentaries and sports

    • jancsika 1 hour ago
      > To preempt replies: ask yourself why 24 frames per second is optimal for cinema instead of just being an ancient spec that everyone got used to.

      "Everyone" includes the filmmakers. And in those cases where the best filmmakers already found all kinds of artistic workarounds for the lower framerate in the places that mattered, adding interpolation will fuck up their films.

      For example, golden age animators did their own interpolation by hand. In Falling Hare, Bugs' utter despair after looking out the window of a nosediving airplane is animated by a violent turn of his head that moves farther than what could be smoothly animated at 24fps. To avoid the jumpcut, there is a tween of an elongated bunny head with four ears, seven empty black eye sockets, four noses, and eight teeth. It's absolutely terrifying if you pause on that frame[1], but it does a perfect job of connecting the other cells and evoking snappier motion than what 24fps could otherwise show.

      Claiming that motion interpolation makes for a better Falling Hare is like claiming that keeping the piano's damper pedal down through the entirety of Bach's Prelude in C produces better Bach than on a harpsichord. In both cases, you're using objectively better technology poorly, in order to produce worse results.

      1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zAPf5fSDGVk

    • adzm 1 hour ago
      > The soap opera effect is only a problem because no one is used to it. Higher FPS is objectively better.

      But synthesizing these frames ends up with a higher frame rate but with the same shutter angle / motion blur of the original frame rate, which looks off to me. Same reason the shutter angle is adjusted for footage that is intended to be slow motion.

  • sholladay 2 hours ago
    When people say “creator’s intent”, it sounds like a flavor. Like how food comes out of the kitchen before you put toppings on it to make it your own.

    But vivid mode (et al) literally loses information. When the TV tries to make everything look vibrant, it’s effectively squishing all of the colors into a smaller color space. You may not be able to even tell two distinct objects apart because everything is similarly bright and vibrant.

    Same with audio. The famous “smile” EQ can cause some instruments to disappear, such as woodwinds.

    At the end of the day, media is for enjoyment and much of it is subjective, so fine do what you need to do to be happy. But few people would deliberately choose lower resolution (except maybe for nostalgia), which is what a lot of the fancy settings end up doing.

    Get a calibration if you can, or use Filmmaker Mode. The latter will make the TV relatively dark, but there’s usually a way to adjust it or copy its settings and then boost the brightness in a Custom mode, which is still a big improvement over default settings from the default mode.

  • tguvot 5 hours ago
    what about not filming entire show in darkness. or, i don't know, filming it in a way that it will look ok on modern televisions without having to turn off settings.
    • chmod775 5 hours ago
      > filming it in a way that it will look ok on modern televisions without having to turn off settings.

      That's a lost cause. You never know what sort of random crap and filters a clueless consumer may inflict on the final picture. You cannot possibly make it look good on every possible config.

      What you can do is make sure your movie looks decent on most panels out there, assuming they're somewhat standard and aren't configured to go out of their way to nullify most of your work.

      The average consumer either never knew these settings existed, or played around with them once when they set up their TV and promptly forgot. As someone who often gets to set up/fix setups for aforementioned people, I'd say this is a good reminder.

    • intothemild 5 hours ago
      Or specially.. stopping at season 2 of this show.
      • imron 5 hours ago
        In some ways, Firefly being canceled was the best thing that ever happened to it.
      • phito 5 hours ago
        This is the way.
      • tguvot 5 hours ago
        even better
    • ycombinatrix 5 hours ago
      Why should I change my style? Modern TVs are the ones that suck.
      • tguvot 2 hours ago
        if you film for television, you need to take into consideration how it will look on television
        • serf 1 hour ago
          sure, but netflix is probably one of the most tenuous examples of groups that film for television.

          they film for screens , regardless of where those might be.

  • kstrauser 5 hours ago
    Yeah, kiss m'ass. I agree that some of those settings do need to be turned off. When I visit someone and see their TV on soap opera mode, I fight the urge to fix it. Not my house, not my TV, not my problem if they like it that way, and yet, wow, is it ever awful.

    But then getting into recommendations like "turn off vivid mode" is pretty freaking pretentious, in my opinion, like a restaurant where the chef freaks out if you ask for salt. Yes, maybe the entree is perfectly salted, but I prefer more, and I'm the one paying the bill, so calm yourself as I season it to my tastes. Yes, vivid modes do look different than the filmmaker intended, but that also presumes that the viewer's eyes are precisely as sensitive as the director's. What if I need higher contrast to make out what's happening on the screen? Is it OK if I calibrate my TV to my own personal viewing conditions? What if it's not perfectly dark in my house, or I want to watch during the day without closing all the blinds?

    I tried watching the ending of Game of Thrones without tweaking my TV. I could not physically see what was happening on the screen, other than that a navy blue blob was doing something against a darker grey background, and parts of it seemed to be moving fast if I squinted. I cranked the brightness and contrast for those episodes so that I could actually tell what was going on. It might not have aligned with the director's idea of how I should experience their spectacle, but I can live with that.

    Note that I’d also roll my eyes at a musician who told me how to set my equalizer. I’ll set it as I see fit for me, in my living room’s own requirements, thanks.

    • zzo38computer 2 hours ago
      I agree that the viewer should change the settings if they want different settings than the film maker intended, although it also makes sense to have a option (not mandatory) to use the settings that the film maker intended (if these settings are known) in case you do not want to specify your own settings. (The same would apply to audio, web pages, etc.)
      • kstrauser 1 hour ago
        Sure. I’m all for having that as an option, or even the default. That’s a good starting place for most people. I think what I most object to is the pretentiousness I read into the quote:

        > Whatever you do, do not switch anything on ‘vivid’ because it’s gonna turn on all the worst offenders. It’s gonna destroy the color, and it’s not the filmmaker’s intent.

        I’m interested in trying the filmmaker’s intent, like I’ll try the chef’s dinner before adding salt because it’ll probably be wonderful. But if I think the meal still needs salt, or my TV needs more brightness or contrast, I’ll add it. And even if the filmmaker or chef thinks I’m ruining their masterpiece, if I like it better that way, that’s how I’ll enjoy it.

        And I’m very serious about the accessibility bit. My vision is great, but I need more contrast now than I did when I was 20. Maybe me turning up the brightness and contrast, or adding salt, lets me perceive the vision or taste the meal the same way as the director or chef does.

    • einsteinx2 4 hours ago
      100% agree. I’ve tried multiple times to use the cinema modes in my TVs, the ones that are supposed to be “as the director intended” but in the end they’re always too dark and I find things hard to see, and turns out I just subjectively like the look of movies on the normal (or gasp sometimes vivid if it’s really bright in the room) than in the “proper” cinema mode. I don’t really care what the creator thinks, it looks better to me so it’s better for me.

      The equalizer analogy is perfect.

      • redox99 43 minutes ago
        Movies are mastered for a dark room. It's not going to look good with accurate settings if you are in a lit room.

        Having said that, there are a lot of bad HDR masters.

    • robomartin 5 hours ago
      > What if I need higher contrast to make out what's happening on the screen?

      The point you make isn't incorrect at all. I would say that TV's should ship without any such enhancements enabled. The user should then be able to configure it as they wish.

      Plenty of parallel examples of this: Microsoft should ship a "clean" version of Windows. Users can they opt into whatever they might want to add.

      Social media sites should default to the most private non-public sharing settings. Users can open it up to the world if they wish. Their choice.

      Going back to TV's: They should not ship with spyware, log-ware, behavioral tracking and advertising crap. Users can opt into that stuff if they value proposition being offered appeals to them.

      Etc.

      • kstrauser 5 hours ago
        > I would say that TV's should ship without any such enhancements enabled.

        I strongly agree with that. The default settings should be… well, “calibrated” is the wrong word here, but that. They should be in “stand out among others on the showroom floor” mode, but set up to show an accurate picture in the average person’s typical viewing environment. Let the owner tweak as they see fit from there. If they want soap opera mode for some bizarre reason, fine, they can enable it once it’s installed. Don’t make the rest of us chase down whatever this particular brand calls it.

  • osakasake 5 hours ago
    [dead]
  • sublinear 5 hours ago
    I'm not even convinced anyone really watches Stranger Things, so I don't see the point. Seems like something people put on as background noise while they are distracted by their phones.
    • cwillu 1 hour ago
      I see a tonne of “fan” content on the video sites tagged #strangerthings, which is strange since I have that tag blocked. It's almost like it's all paid promotion…
    • tzs 5 hours ago
      People were clearly watching through at least season 4. That show used songs that nowadays most viewers would consider to be oldies that became hits again after the episodes containing them were released.

      For example Kate Bush's 1985 "Running up that Hill" because a huge worldwide hit after appearing in season 4.

      • cwillu 1 hour ago
        “Running up that hill” becomes a huge worldwide hit approximately every ten years.
      • TimorousBestie 1 hour ago
        I never watched the show but I did catch the revival of interest in Kate Bush by osmosis, so I think the show probably does have some cultural impact.
    • ycombinatrix 5 hours ago
      I think people paid attention to at least season 1 back in the day.
    • mikrl 5 hours ago
      Just for the synth intro
  • andersa 33 minutes ago
    Release your movie in native 120 fps and I'll turn off motion interpolation. Until then, minor flickering artifacts when it fails to resolve motion, or minor haloing around edges of moving objects, are vastly preferable to unwatchable judder that I can't even interpret as motion sometimes.

    Every PC gamer knows you need high frame rates for camera movement. It's ridiculous the movie industry is stuck at 24 like it's the stone age, only because of some boomers screaming of some "soap opera" effect they invented in their brains. I'd imagine most Gen Z people don't even know what a "soap opera" is supposed to be, I had to look it up the first time I saw someone say it.

    My LG OLED G5 literally provides a better experience than going to the cinema, due to this.