Jay wrote:Even films shot on film could have problems if their effects and grading weren't done at high resolutions.
Ah good point (and sorry if that was your original meaning, Aran). Now that you mention it, I seem to remember reading they completely redid the effects for Star Trek: The Next Generation for its Blu-ray release, for that very reason.
Still, for any movie produced in the digital age you'd think they will have held on to all their 3D assets, and it would simply (okay maybe not so simple) be a matter of re-rendering and re-compositing them. Re-rendering should be pretty much automatic... I wonder how much manual effort goes into re-compositing.
Datschge wrote:With 4K you reach the level of current tech in cinemas (one that was only introduced when cinemas changed to digital projectors which was yesterday in cinema time, 2011), of course getting stuff making good use of that is going to be a rather big problem.
Seems like it's a largely matter of whether people's TV sets get big enough. Which given today's consumer culture might not be that unlikely.
Perhaps personal displays (Oculus Rift and the ilk) might eventually be able to put that kind of resolution to use?