Friday, 30 June 2017

MPEG starts work on immersive standard

Broadcast

International standards committee MPEG has begun work on a new standard for future immersive content applications.
http://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/techfacils/mpeg-starts-work-on-immersive-standard/5119549.article?blocktitle=Latest-News&contentID=1151
The development of ISO/IEC 23090, nicknamed MPEG-I, is split into five stages, with the ultimate aim of creating an entirely new codec by 2022.
The first step is to agree an application format for omnidirectional media (OMAF) that will enable panoramic video with 2D and 3D audio, with various degrees of 3D visual perception.
“For some MPEG members, OMAF is the number one activity, since there is an urgent need for a standard,” said Mary-Luc Champel, standards director and principal scientist at Technicolor. “The work is in draft form and the goal is to make it public by the end of this year.”
While OMAF will build on existing compression standard High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC) and streaming protocol Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP (DASH), MPEG has called for video test material, including from plenoptic cameras and camera arrays, to build a new codec addressing Light Field. This technique captures all the light rays at every point in space, travelling in every direction.
“If data from a Light Field is known then views from all possible positions can be reconstructed, even with the same depth of focus, by combining individual light rays,” said Champel. “Multiview, freeview point and 360video are subsampled versions of this. Due to the amount of data, a technological breakthrough [in compression] is expected.”

Thursday, 29 June 2017

35mm: the format that refused to die

RedShark News

Seven years ago it looked like 35mm was a dead format. In the digital era though it still seems to thrive, with Kodak's recent announcement that it has re-opened a lab at the UK's Pinewood Studios - by the looks of it to support the Star Wars franchise - part of an increasing amount of background chatter that's becoming difficult to ignore.
https://www.redsharknews.com/production/item/4701-35mm-the-format-that-refuses-to-die

There was a time – let’s call it 2010 – when celluloid had passed its sell by date and digital was set to rule. Kodak had manufactured its last roll of 35mm (having barely survived bankruptcy in 2004); Deluxe and Technicolor merged then shuttered their labs around the world and even Martin Scorsese was making stereo 3D (a trick not so easily managed with dual sprockets).
But die-hard cineastes have had a last hurrah. Kodak has just re-opened a lab at Pinewood Studios in a deal which will last until 2022. That’s not coincidentally the timeframe for Disney’s planned 10 Star Wars films of which JJ Abrams’ The Force Awakens and Rian Johnson’s The Last Jedi (Episode VIII) are 35mm shows (Rogue One went suitably rogue and shot digital). They are all camped in Buckinghamshire.
As is James Bond. Kodak has taken space in the Ken Adam building and will be a cert to handle dailies for 007’s next outing given the success DP Hoyte van Hoytema made with 35mm for Sam Mendes’ Spectre.
While the lament that electronics could never hope to capture the magic of the chemical process was always a bit whimsical, many cinematographers have found it hard to match the aesthetic qualities of negative in digital form.
Even where digital is used, DPs regularly turned to old style optics and anamorphics from Cooke or Panavision to give their work an idiosyncratic or romantic look, often with a flare effect or bokeh which can’t quite be recreated without them.
The cost argument was never quite proven either. Shooting video may allow a production to shoot as much as it wants without needing to finance each reel, but there were ‘hidden’ costs to digital in post production from data wrangling to storage.
Most importantly, film was championed by directors like Christopher Nolan and Quentin Tarantino. So successful was Nolan’s original Batman Begins (2005), there was no way Warner Bros. wasn’t going to acquiesce to the director shooting the rest of the franchise and whatever else he wanted on the format.  
That includes Dunkirk, Nolan’s new epic which is not shot with any 35mm at all. Having lensed sequences of his previous films including Interstellar on IMAX 70mm, this time the entire film is shot on 65mm negative. Seventy percent of the film was shot on IMAX which is 65mm 15 perf. (1.43:1). The rest was shot on 65mm 5 perf (2.2:1) on Panavision cameras (the negative is 65mm, the print is 70mm). Each day the rushes were sent back to Fotokem in LA for processing. Travelling with Nolan during principal photography was a 70mm projector on which he could view dailies.
While such a cumbersome set-up is not for everyone, he and other director’s insistence on retaining film at least as a choice for acquisition forced the studios to force Kodak’s hand. In 2015 the firm reversed its decision to stop making 35mm film and promised a limited supply of stock to Hollywood for the foreseeable future.
Over the last few years, the format’s renaissance has been remarkable. Boyhood, Interstellar, The Grand Budapest Hotel, Inherent Vice, The Imitation Game and Foxcatcher were all 2015 Oscar nominated pictures photographed on film. 2016’s awards front-runners Carol, Bridge of Spies, The Hateful Eight, Joy, Black Mass, Son of Saul, The Big Short and Steve Jobs were also, in whole or in part, 16mm or 35mm originated.
And the choice of shooting on 35mm or Super 16mm film had a clear impact on the 2017 cinematography Oscar race including La La Land, Fences, Jackie, Nocturnal Animals, Loving and Hidden Figures.
More surprisingly, given their heavy VFX content, major releases Jurassic Park, Spectre, Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, Suicide Squad, Jason Bourne, The Mummy and Life also originated on film. 
Not without some justification then “movies captured on film are winning nominations and awards at a disproportionately high rate,” claims Steve Bellamy, president of Kodak Motion Picture and Entertainment. "Film benefits from the world's greatest motion picture artists using it, but the world's greatest motion picture artists also make better movies because they use film.”
While shooting film is no guarantee of quality, it does seem to add a certain ‘kite mark’ of auteur intent to the filmmakers behind it.
Nolan, for example, has managed to get Dunkirk released two days early in cinemas with 35mm or 70mm projectors. Perhaps this high-profile endorsement will give a shot in the arm to the art of physical film projection, even if only temporarily (120 years of cinema projection is about to upended entirely by so-called direct view TV panels sold by Samsung and Sony).
In response to this resurgence Kodak also recently acquired a film-processing lab in Atlanta, where film is being processed for The Walking Dead and it has also built an entirely new film lab in New York.

Nor is Kodak the only lab in town. Cinelab in Slough has been flying the flag throughout the period when everyone seemed to be deserting the format, making a living by processing the dailies of a few film projects that were being commissioned but mostly by offering an archiving service. 
Let’s not forget that film is the only medium ever proven that will retain visual media for a century – and you can ‘read’ it by shining a light through it unlike optical disc or solid state variants.
For now, though, film is very much alive.

MAM moves to the cloud

Broadcast

Broadcasters and vendors are reappraising the monolithic media asset management system with a modular approach more suited to cloud business and production workflows.
http://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/techfacils/mam-moves-to-the-cloud/5119274.article
There is a widely held perception – rarely discussed – within the broadcast industry that despite all the marketing hype, media asset management (MAM) has struggled to deliver the expected benefits of time, (budget) savings and functionality. Even MAM systems vendors acknowledge that some implementations have not been a success.
“MAM systems weren’t built to make money, but rather save money,” says Cantemo chief executive Parham Azimi.
“MAM systems streamline workflows, enabling companies to ingest video content or access archived content, find the right assets, work with that content, and distribute it. Making that process simpler ultimately saves time, and therefore money.
“It is much the same as any business process system, where the firm generates its revenue elsewhere, but the system can minimise time spent on administration, which is time that can be spent generating revenue.”
It has always been difficult to calculate the return on investment for MAM, in part because the term itself is too broad to give a blanket answer.
“Whereas a well-executed MAM solution can increase operational efficiency and enable new distribution models and revenues, the precise savings, either forecast or in retrospect, are often unclear,” says Jeremy Bancroft, director at consultancy Media Asset Capital.
MAM is about managing content, and specifically where it is. It’s the modern version of knowing what shelf the tape is on, and the processes for moving it around. Yet at a typical broadcaster, the scope of a MAM could include supporting transmission (TX); archive and library management; production, news or graphics operations; or any combination of the above
“In TX, MAM or content preparation applications, it is relatively easy to set a metric to measure ROI – the number of man hours required to get one hour of broadcast content ready for transmission or distribution,” Bancroft says.
“This is measurable pre- and post-MAM implementation, and we would expect a 30-50% improvement in operational efficiency as the result of an expertly specified and implemented MAM solution.”
A production MAM might shorten production timescales and provide “real savings” in the production cycle, he suggests.
“Archive and news MAM are much more difficult when it comes to creating an ROI, but these solutions can significantly improve production quality by providing choice to producers.”
Assessing ROI
Even then, many MAM systems take a long time to prove. Bancroft, who has been involved with this sector for almost 20 years, says some systems have only really started to deliver in the past five to eight years.
Ian Brotherston, chief executive of media services business TVT, says countless case studies and customer testimonials endorse the position that a well-implemented MAM can boost productivity.
“However, an analysis of media-processing costs, which include MAM, equipment, storage, networking, accommodation and people – which is often the largest cost – will reveal that it is often more beneficial to move to a service model than to do it in-house, no matter which MAM you have deployed,” he says.
Niall Duffy, chief marketing officer at digital workflow specialist Virtual AI and a former head of IT workflow at Sony, goes further.
“The concept of MAM either enabling new revenues or cutting costs is mainly a fallacy,” he says. “A MAM is the necessary glue in any large-scale file-based workflow, not a strategic broadcast system. It does not streamline or cut out manual resource.”
Deployment of MAM has reduced tape costs, he says, but added IT storage costs, “and in total, probably increased storage costs” because people now make more use of content.
“MAM systems have reduced the headcount and costs associated with VTR handling or content operations, but that was down to file ingest and transcoding replacing tape duplication and lines recording,” he says. “In reality, good process and process enforcement deliver cost-cutting, not MAM systems.”
If a MAM has failed to deliver, the blame is placed as much at the feet of buyers as it is vendors. Duffy argues that most broadcasters treat MAM as a technology project, not process re-engineering, in part because they are not very good at process re-engineering projects.
“Unless a technology deployment is firmly rooted in a business benefits context, it will never deliver on any promises made or expected,” he adds.
“With realistic expectations and a willingness to remodel processes, MAM and related technologies can deliver substantial benefits, but they don’t do it all by themselves.”
Tim Burton, managing director of IT systems integrator Magenta Broadcast, agrees: “If a project has not gone well, it tends to be because the user didn’t realise what they needed, and the result is something designed by committee: either too expensive or too bespoke. You can spend a long time delivering it and then not hit anyone’s sweet spot.”
Bancroft says he’s seen many cases of broadcasters being too prescriptive at the proposal stage. This leads to the rejection of all proposals as they cannot possibly meet the stated ‘must have’ requirements, “leaving the customer with the only option of either changing the specification or building their own solution”.
Shifting to the cloud
If decisions to invest in MAM are hard to judge now, what are broadcasters and media owners to make of shifting the process to the cloud?
“The cloud changes the options for video content providers,” says Azimi. “For example, it changes the possibilities of scale-on-demand that organisations can have. It also changes the way people can approach where to manage their content and how much content can be managed on a single system.
“It affects how it will be rolled out to users and how it will impact the workflow within an organisation. Crucially, without an overwhelming IT infrastructure, broadcasters no longer need to become an IT company to implement a MAM system within the organisation.”
Some cloud-ready systems are, however, standard MAMs that have simply been virtualised and put in the cloud. According to Azimi, this causes several problems and will never perform the same as a system built natively for the cloud.
“Virtualised solutions cannot take as much advantage of the elasticity of cloud offerings, nor can they benefit fully from automatic switching to another system in the event of failure,” he says.
“It’s not just the MAM functions that need to be cloud-based,” stresses Bancroft. “The solution needs to take advantage of processing in the cloud for rendering, transcoding, QC checking and so on.”
Howard Twine, director of software strategy at MAM and storage vendor EditShare, believes there are too many software solutions that are not cloud ready.
“MAM vendors are scratching their heads,” he says. “Due to the broad nature of MAM, there are so many components provided by different vendors that need to talk to one another.
“This can be challenging enough in a static and sterile facility. Add to this the changing nature of ad hoc hosted compute instances and you have all the ingredients for the perfect disaster cocktail.”
It seems the key is to view MAM as just one part of the puzzle, which is integrated with other systems and able to orchestrate and automate processes across facilities and locations.
Erik Åhlin, co-founder of API-based MAM platform Vidispine, contends that MAM will be reduced to a “comparably irrelevant software category” unless vendors can turn it into a production-based software-as-a-service.
“Whatever any video platform as a service looks like, it must be something other than just installing software on cloud and paying per month,” he says.
“The media industry must have higher expectations than that. Imagine setting up a new niche channel in a few hours with no Capex, no staff, no infrastructure and no software to run – and then measure the cost on the same terms as revenue.”
THE BROADCASTER VIEW
MAM has meant different things to different people, with the consequence that functions from workflow and ingest to storage management and content processing were all wrapped under one single monolithic system,” says Tom Griffiths, director of broadcast and distribution technology at ITV.
“Broadcasters have been guilty of wanting such a monolithic MAM without understanding the challenges this represents in terms of cost, complexity and integration.”
UKTV director of operations Sinead Greenaway agrees: “Broadcasters have a history of over-architecting MAM, almost treating it as a panacea for every content metadata and image problem the business faces. MAMs haven’t kept pace with the rate of change. They become legacy almost as soon as they are plumbed into an organisation.”
ITV have pursued a more refined model, selecting multiple ‘best of breed’ MAMs and gluing them together with code written inhouse. “For some companies, the overhead may not be justifiable, but having a software development team keeps everything under our control,” says Griffiths.
“If we feel a certain MAM is no longer useful, or another might perform better, we have the ability to swap it out.”
ITV is taking this approach to the cloud. It is in a “transitional” and “active research” phase, in which some of its asset management remains on premises (such as news, where it uses Avid) and others (for content delivery) are increasingly run from data centres.
“Cloud makes a clear distinction between classic MAM products and new vendors that have built systems from scratch in the cloud,” Griffith says.
“The [latter] tend to be much more focused around a specific business challenge like managing rushes in a remote production or work in progress workflows for post.”
The cloud makes it easier to break MAM into different components “for workflow or human decision-making, automation, management of assets and the content catalogue, and content processing”.
“Another thing cloud enables is a change in the economics of production and delivery,” he adds. “We’re moving away from traditional software licensing towards more of a pay-as-you go model.”
Instead of a ‘super MAM’, UKTV also sought a more modular approach, beginning with storage in the cloud and handpickingMAMs for the workflow.
“Avid Interplay works well for post-production,” says Greenaway. “This interfaces with the MAM, which [outsourced post-provider] The Farm uses.”
“We need more modular MAM tools that can cater for the vagaries of all workflows,” she adds.
“Yet there are structural problems as an industry with moving MAM to the cloud. In theory, we can put MAM in the cloud, but in itself it’s not doing anything until we know how our workflow will work.
“That in turn demands a rethink about common standards and security. It still feels that cloud workflow is nascent and the industry is struggling under the weight of service provision.”
Vidispine clients will be doing this before the end of the year at large scale. “Ultimately, cloud is how the chief financial officer steals the ‘media supply chain’ agenda from the chief technology officer,” Åhlin says.
The trend is that more tasks are moving from in-house to specialist service providers where MAM is just part of the service. Broadcasters and media owners don’t want – and, in many cases, can’t afford – the capital expenditure to build media processing operations or the operating expenditure to hire, train and retain the people needed to scale these tasks.
“The simple economies-of-scale argument suggests that MAM will ultimately be moved to service providers who will deliver a fixed cost per asset processed model,” says Brotherston.
“It’s not just the broadcasting industry. Looking at enterprises that are desperately trying to reduce data centre sprawl by virtualising and using software-as-a-service for tasks such as customer relationship management or enterprise resource planning – the move to an as-a-service model makes a lot of sense and MAMs will have to adapt accordingly.”

Gearing up for the HDR revolution

Broadcast

The volume of TV and film content being made available with High Dynamic Range (HDR) is expected to increase significantly in the coming months with the emphasis on HD back catalogues as well as original Ultra High Definition (UHD) programming.
http://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/techfacils/gearing-up-for-the-hdr-revolution/5119509.article?blocktitle=Latest-News&contentID=1151
The technology required to upscale or convert content originally shot in standard dynamic range (SDR) to HDR is now being incorporated into production, distribution and display equipment, allowing broadcasters to re-master archive HD programming for future distribution.
UHD sports channels such as BT Sport, which produced live coverage of the Champions League final in HDR, are likely to implement HDR first, but ABI Research expects HD HDR channels to begin airing in 2018.
“We would expect all the content on these channels to be delivered in HDR to ensure TVs don’t have to switch modes, which can result in visual glitches,” said ABI managing director and vice president Sam Rosen. “This can be achieved through colour up-sampling,” he added.
Some of the latest 4K TVs from Sony, Samsung and LG support such conversion. Technicolor has demonstrated up-sampling of sports content, as well as commercials, to show that many of the benefits of HDR can be achieved even with legacy content, to create HDR channels.
At the same time, French audiovisual lab B-com says it is in discussions with various manufacturers about integrating its conversion technology into cameras, encoders, switchers and TV sets. Harmonic, Embrionix and Intel have already demonstrated it and B-com hopes to have commercial agreements signed by IBC.
According to Nicolas Dallery, B-com marketing and sales director, “Tier 1 European broadcasters” are currently testing it. “Our solution deals with this transition period where many broadcasters are not willing to invest in new UHD HDR equipment because they only invested in HD a few years ago. They don’t have the capex to afford another huge investment. Our solution deals with legacy content and legacy equipment.”
B-com’s technology, which is compatible with the HDR standards Perceptual Quantizer (PQ) and Hybrid Log-Gamma (HLG), works in real-time for live production where HD cameras can be upscaled to HDR alongside UHD HDR feeds.
ABI predicts that around 60% of TV households in Western Europe will have HDR-capable TV sets by 2020. HDR TV shipments – including HD HDR sets ­– will reach 245 million units globally in 2022, it adds.

Tuesday, 27 June 2017

Sky Takes Stake in V-Nova

Streaming Media


The compression specialist hopes Sky's profile will lift not only the attributes of its Perseus technology but an outcome similar to Amazon's swoop for Elemental.


Sky has bought a minority stake in V-Nova, the London-based company behind the Perseus compression technology.
The investment of £4.5 million ($5.7 million) is being made through Sky subsidiary Sky Italia but complements previous tech and startup investments made by the group including in cross-platform network Whistle Sports, online video aggregator Pluto.TV, U.S. ad tech firm Sharethrough, and in Elemental Technologies nine months prior to the encoding firm's $500 million purchase by Amazon in 2015.
Sky Italia began working with V-Nova in 2015 and has used Perseus for contribution links during coverage of football matches and for IPTV delivery.
"This transaction is important for us given Sky's very successful record with companies like Roku and Elemental," said Guido Meardi, CEO of V-Nova. "Statistically speaking we hope for good things."
A stake in V-Nova will enable Sky "to look at Perseus in a deeper way and to look for additional use cases," said Meardi. "Our work with Sky Italia has not gone unnoticed in the group. We can't say more, other than that the whole Sky group is looking at Perseus for future service applications."
Eutelsat is another minority shareholder in V-Nova.

Perseus 2, the latest version of its flagship codec,
launched in April. No deployments have been announced.
A key selling point is that Perseus 2 can be used in combination with other 'base' codecs including HEVC, VP9, and AV1.
Encoding/decoding processing power efficiency and visual quality are improved in Perseus 2 with 100Kbps necessary to deliver mobile video to all consumers, 1Mbps claimed as the benchmark for "monetizable full HD mobile video" and just 6Mbps, for "high quality UHD movie streaming and 4K 360/VR immersive experiences at scale," according to the company.
V-Nova also took take steps to integrate the codec into standard encoding/deployment technologies, including HTML5 playback and encoding with FFmpeg.
"Although Perseus Plus was original created for 14year-old chips using a mixture of hardware and software available in the device, we can run purely in software in current generation mobile phone chips and not consume any more power than the 'hardware' versions in the devices," says Fabio Murra, SVP product & marketing. "We can of course also still use hardware blocks to further reduce power consumption."
P-link, the firm's encoder and decoder for remote production and contribution, has been deployed by Mediapro (for use during an El Classico match 2015), by Eutelsat (to contribute UHD links of UEFA Euro 2016 matches to Rai customers), and by Sky.
"P-link is unique because it allows you to combine a lot of feeds with dynamic frame by frame multiplexing to makes exceptional use of bandwidth," says Murra. "For example, you can keep the programme feed at very high quality and all other camera feeds at a lower quality to make effective use of bandwidth.
"Even over 1 gigabit you can do remote production/contribution of UHD, which is science fiction with any other low-latency system. There are a lot of players very interested in this."
The company acquired the full global patent portfolio of video imaging experts Faroudja Enterprises in January this year.
While not part of any current deployment, Faroudja's pre-processor and post-processor technology will be fed into future use cases.
"This is a very important technology for our roadmap," says Meardi. "Faroudja's technology has already been demonstrated to provide a bitrate reduction of 35-50% over existing compression techniques."
Meardi says V-Nova is working with SMPTE to ensure P-link works with file formats IMF and MXF for nonlinear production workflows.
"Where productions shoot with multiple high-resolution cameras and require mathematically lossless quality, this can quickly build into expensive and cumbersome storage. P-link has a strong advantage in those contexts."
The company claims to complement rather than compete with established codecs HEVC, AVC, and H.264. It will also work with and encourage MPEG to build its next-gen codec for immersive media, MPEG-I.
"We are extremely supportive of ITU and MPEG," says Meardi. "Perseus can work as a standalone format especially for distribution applications where it works alongside other video encapsulation formats. We don't want to reinvent the wheel of encryption, audio, metadata management and watermarking or to create another transport stream. We want to focus on compression. Our focus is on Perseus to meet the needs of media today but we are not standing still. The work of MPEG is necessary for future applications such as 6Dof, for which HEVC will not be enough."
He adds, "People underestimate the amount of work necessary to really create a codec that can connect billions of users and can be integrated with other platforms. It requires a lot of cash."

Thursday, 22 June 2017

The Landing to return post hub to landlord

Broadcast

MediaCityUK digital enterprise incubator The Landing is to return its post-production department to Peel Media following a revision of its business plan.
http://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/techfacils/the-landing-to-return-post-hub-to-landlord/5119351.article?blocktitle=Latest-News&contentID=1151
Peel Media, part of Peel Group, is the landlord of the Salford site and owner of Dock 10. One possibility is that Peel will now lease the facility back to Dock 10, though this has not been confirmed.
Dock 10 had run The Landing’s post department, which includes 10 Avid suites and Avid Isis storage, since 2013.
The Landing chief executive Jon Corner said: “Given where we are heading as a leading UK innovation centre for tech start-up, scale-up and growth, there is little strategic alignment in continuing to operate a post-production floor. It makes sense, therefore, to return that space to Peel.”
The Landing is backed by the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy and Salford City Council. It recently secured a second round of funding until 2019 from the European Regional Development Fund and is providing space for start-ups in user experience design, cloud and both virtual and augmented reality.
“This is all in line with our ambition to be one of the UK’s leading tech incubators,” said Corner. “In 2016 alone, we contributed £89.2m GVA to the UK digital economy.”
The post-production department at The Landing, referred to originally as a content production hub, was set up to provide freelancers and SMEs in the North with open-access editing facilities.
Corner said: “Our focus going forward will lean more towards supporting growth tech enterprise, founders and product innovation.”

Tuesday, 20 June 2017

IMAX now have serious rivals in the 'premium large format' sector

Screen Daily
The competition is fierce, with Dolby, Ymagis and exhibitors muscling in on the market.
Premium large format (PLF) is a growing part of the market, with well over 2,500 screens in place at the end of 2016, according to IHS Markit.
Exhibitors such as Vue (VueXtreme) and Odeon (iSense) have launched their own PLF brands so as to avoid paying overheads to market leader Imax (though the future of iSense must be in doubt given Imax’s $25.7m [£20m] deal with Odeon/UCI parent AMC to convert 25 new sites in Europe).
The core PLF technology combines systems allied to comfort seating and large screens (15 metres and above). More recently this has also included high dynamic range (HDR) and immersive sound systems. This space is set to grow further as CinemaNext, the exhibitor services unit of French group Ymagis, rolls out Sphera.
This concept unites a Dolby Atmos-based audio system with EclairColor HDR technology from Ymagis subsidiary clair and LED lighting for ambience (around seats and the foyer), but uniquely this does not require a large-dimensioned screen. Instead, CinemaNext is targeting exhibitors with small- to mid-sized screens who may feel they lack the marketing clout to compete with Imax or PLF rival Dolby Cinema. The first handful of European Sphera installations are expected to be announced at CineEurope.
“We think you can deliver a premium immersive experience in a small theatre if it’s well done,” explains Till Cussmann, SVP at CinemaNext. “Existing premium models are very expensive and limited to those exhibitors willing to revenue share. Many exhibitors don’t have the resources for revenue sharing and are not necessarily best equipped to market their own premium concept. There’s a wide base for a less expensive turnkey solution combined with marketing expertise.”
The market’s dominant HDR format is Dolby Cinema, sold by Dolby as part of a PLF package that includes Atmos and Christie laser projectors. This reportedly costs around $562,000 (€500,000) per screen. In contrast, EclairColor will cost “below $56,000 (€50,000) for a small room and $90,000 (€80,000) for a large room”, according to Jean Mizrahi, Ymagis president and CEO.
Separately, CinemaNext is promoting EclairColor as a mass-market opportunity for cinemas to present films in high dynamic range. Developed with Sony projectors, the software system also works with some Barco projectors, and other vendors are expected to add compatibility by year end. Exhibitors with existing projectors from these brands will be required to pay a small fee for a firmware upgrade.
Currently only Eclair in Paris is equipped to perform mastering in EclairHDR, which adds an extra $22,400 (€20,000) per film to the DCP cost, but the company aims to license the technology to post-production system manufacturers to give productions a wider range of mastering options.
The trick with any new format is to get content made in it. Francois Ozon’s Cannes Competition title Amant Double is one of 35 titles already mastered in the format. La La Landwas the first studio title released in EclairColor. “From the studio’s perspective, it doesn’t make sense to provide content in any format while there are no screens,” says Mizrahi. “Soon, we will have enough screens to make it attractive for them.
Present on more than 50 screens in France, Germany, Italy and Tunisia, and with a pilot install at London’s Curzon Soho, CinemaNext expects 80 screens by year end. With around 300 committed, mostly between AMC and Wanda, Dolby has installed more than 70 Dolby Cinema screens, and has released or announced 75 films to be formatted for the concept. “With video platforms like Netflix investing massively into content and HDR, we believe cinema can’t be left behind,” says Mizrahi. “High dynamic range is a must. The improvement in quality is huge and the consumer proposition compelling when the additional outlay for studios and exhibitors is very limited.”