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Wikipedia

Telecine

Telecine (/ˈtɛləsɪn/ or /ˌtɛləˈsɪn/) is the process of transferring film into video and is performed in a color suite. The term is also used to refer to the equipment used in this post-production process.[1]

Spirit DataCine 4K with the doors open

Telecine enables a motion picture, captured originally on film stock, to be viewed with standard video equipment, such as television sets, video cassette recorders (VCR), DVD, Blu-ray Disc or computers. Initially, this allowed television broadcasters to produce programs using film, usually 16-mm stock, but transmit them in the same format, and quality, as other forms of television production.[2] Furthermore, telecine allows film producers, television producers and film distributors working in the film industry to release their productions on video and allows producers to use video production equipment to complete their filmmaking projects.

Within the film industry, it is also referred to as a TK, because TC is already used to designate timecode. Motion picture film scanners are similar to telecines.

History edit

With the advent of popular broadcast television, producers realized they needed more than live television programming. By turning to film-originated material, they would have access to the wealth of films made for the cinema in addition to recorded television programming on film that could be aired at different times. However, the difference in frame rates between film (generally 24 frames/s) and television (30 or 25 frames/s, interlaced) meant that simply playing a film into a television camera would result in flickering.

The kinescope was used to record the image from a television display to film, synchronized to the TV scan rate. The film could then be shown directly into a video camera for retransmission.[3] Non-live programming could also be filmed using the kinescope, edited mechanically as normal, and then played back for TV. As the film was run at the same speed as the television, the flickering was eliminated. Various displays, including projectors for these video rate films, slide projectors and film cameras were often combined into a film chain, allowing the broadcaster to cue up various forms of media and switch between them by moving a mirror or prism. Color was supported by using a multi-tube video camera, prisms, and filters to separate the original color signal and feed the red, green and blue to individual tubes.

However, this still left film shot at cinema frame rates as a problem. The obvious solution is to simply speed up the film to match the television frame rates, but this, at least in the case of NTSC, requires a change that is rather obvious to the eye and ear. The simple solution is to periodically play a selected frame twice. For NTSC, the difference in frame rates can be corrected by showing every fourth frame of film twice. This solution does require the sound to be handled separately. A more advanced technique is to use 2:3 pulldown, discussed below, which turns every second frame of the film into three fields of video, which results in a slightly smoother display. PAL uses a similar system, 2:2 pulldown. However, during the analog broadcasting period, the 24 frames per second film was shown at a slightly faster 25 frames per second rate, to match the PAL video signal. This resulted in a fractionally higher-pitched audio soundtrack, and resulted in feature films having a slightly shorter duration, by being shown 1 frame per second faster.

In recent decades, telecine has primarily been a film-to-storage process, as opposed to film-to-air. Changes since the 1950s have primarily been in terms of equipment and physical formats; the basic concept remains the same. Home movies originally on film may be transferred to video tape using this technique.

Frame rate differences edit

The most complex part of telecine is the synchronization of the mechanical film motion and the electronic video signal. Every time the video (tele) part of the telecine samples the light electronically, the film (cine) part of the telecine must have a frame in perfect registration and ready to photograph. This is relatively easy when the film is photographed at the same frame rate as the video camera will sample, but when this is not true, a sophisticated procedure is required to change frame rate.

To avoid the synchronization issues, higher-end establishments now use a scanning system rather than just a telecine system. This allows them to scan a distinct frame of digital video for each frame of film, providing higher quality than a telecine system would be able to achieve.

Similar issues occur when using vertical synchronization to prevent screen tearing, which is a different problem encountered when frame rates mismatch.

2:2 pulldown edit

 
2:2 pulldown diagram (A-B to A-A-B-B)

In countries that use the PAL or SECAM video standards, film destined for television is photographed at 25 frames per second. The PAL video standard broadcasts at 25 frames per second, so the transfer from film to video is simple; for every film frame, one video frame is captured.

Theatrical features originally photographed at 24 frame/s are shown at 25 frame/s. While this is usually not noticed in the picture (but may be more noticeable during action speed, especially if footage was filmed undercranked—with the camera recording at a frame rate lower than the expected playback speed), the 4% increase in playback speed causes a slightly noticeable increase in audio pitch by about 0.707 semitones. With the use of digital audio workstations, this can be avoided using time stretching algorithms, which speed up audio while preserving pitch, although this method may introduce audible artifacts, especially on complex materials. To mitigate the audio artifacts, time stretching can be applied separately to each production stem (dialog, effects, background, and music), if available.[4]

2:2 pulldown is also used to transfer shows and films, photographed at 30 frames per second, like Friends and Oklahoma! (1955),[5] to NTSC video, which has ~59.94 Hz scanning rate. This requires playback speed to be slowed by a tenth of a percent.

2:3 pulldown edit

 
2:3 pulldown diagram (A-B-C-D to A-A-B-B-B-C-C-D-D-D)

In the United States and other countries where television uses the 59.94 Hz vertical scanning frequency, video is broadcast at ~29.97 frame/s. For the film's motion to be accurately rendered on the video signal, a telecine must use a technique called the 2:3 pulldown, also known as 3:2 pulldown, to convert from 24 to ~29.97 frame/s.

The term "pulldown" comes from the mechanical process of "pulling" (physically moving) the film downward within the film portion of the transport mechanism, to advance it from one frame to the next at a given rate (nominally 24 frames/s). This is accomplished in two steps. The first step is to slow down the film motion by 1/1000 to 24,000/1001 (~23.976) frames/s. The difference in speed is imperceptible to the viewer. For a two-hour film, play time is extended by 7.2 seconds. If the total playback time must be kept exact, a single frame can be dropped every 1000 frames.

The second step of the 2:3 pulldown is distributing cinema frames into video fields. At 23.976 frame/s, there are four frames of film for every five frames of 29.97 frame/s video:

 

These four frames are "stretched" into five by exploiting the interlaced nature of 60 Hz video. For every frame, there are actually two incomplete images or fields, one for the odd-numbered lines of the image, and one for the even-numbered lines. There are, therefore, ten fields for every four film frames, which are called A, B, C, and D. The telecine alternately places frame A across two fields, frame B across three fields, frame C across two fields and frame D across three fields. This can be written as A-A-B-B-B-C-C-D-D-D or 2-3-2-3 or simply 2–3. The cycle repeats itself completely after four film frames.

A 3:2 pulldown pattern is identical to the one shown above except that it is shifted by one frame. For instance, a cycle that starts with film frame B yields a 3:2 pattern: B-B-B-C-C-D-D-D-A-A or 3-2-3-2 or simply 3–2. In other words, there is no difference between the 2-3 and 3-2 patterns. In fact, the "3-2" notation is misleading because according to SMPTE standards for every four-frame film sequence the first frame is scanned twice, not three times.[6]

The above method is a "classic" 2:3, which was used before frame buffers allowed for holding more than one frame. The preferred method for doing a 2:3 creates only one dirty frame in every five (i.e. 3:3:2:2 or 2:3:3:2 or 2:2:3:3); while this method has slightly more judder, it allows for easier upconversion (the dirty frame can be dropped without losing information) and a better overall compression when encoding. The 2:3:3:2 pattern is supported by the Panasonic DVX-100B video camera under the name "Advanced Pulldown". Note that just fields are displayed—no frames hence no dirty frames—in interlaced display such as on a CRT. Dirty frames may appear in other methods of displaying the interlaced video.

2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:3 pulldown edit

A new method called 2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:3, Euro, 12:1 or 24:1 pulldown,[7][8][9] can be used in order to convert 24 frame/s material to 25 frame/s.[10][11] Usually, this involves a film to PAL transfer without the aforementioned 4% speedup. For film at 24 frame/s, there are 24 frames of film for every 25 frames of PAL video. In order to accommodate this mismatch in frame rate, 24 frames of film have to be distributed over 50 PAL fields. This can be accomplished by inserting a pulldown field every 12 frames, thus effectively spreading 12 frames of film over 25 fields (or "12.5 frames") of PAL video.

This method was born out of a frustration with the faster, higher pitched soundtracks that traditionally accompanied films transferred for PAL and SECAM audiences. A few motion pictures are beginning to be telecined this way[citation needed]. It is particularly suited for films where the soundtrack is of special importance.

Other pulldown patterns edit

Similar techniques must be used for films shot at "silent speeds" of less than 24 frame/s, which includes home movie formats (the standard for Standard 8 mm film was 16 fps, and 18 fps for Super 8 mm film) as well as silent film (which in 35 mm format usually was 16 fps, 12 fps, or even lower).

  • 16 frame/s (actually 15.984) to NTSC 30 frame/s (actually 29.97): pulldown should be 3:4:4:4 or the film may be run at 15 frame/s (actually 14.985) then pulldown should be 4:4. As motion pictures shot at this framerate are silent, there is no audio that is affected.
  • 16 frame/s to PAL 25: pulldown should be 3:3:3:3:3:3:3:4 (if the film playback rate is increased to 16⅔ frame/s (1,000 frames per minute), pulldown is simplified to 3:3)
  • 18 frame/s (slowed to 17.982) to NTSC 30: pulldown should be 3:3:4
  • 20 frame/s (slowed to 19.98) to NTSC 30: pulldown should be 3:3
  • 20 frame/s to PAL 25: pulldown should be 3:2
  • 27.5 frame/s to NTSC 30: pulldown should be 3:2:2:2:2
  • 27.5 frame/s to PAL 25: pulldown should be 1:2:2:2:2

Also, other patterns have been described that refer to the progressive frame rate conversion required to display 24 frame/s video (e.g., from a DVD player) on a progressive display (e.g., LCD or plasma):[12]

  • 24 frame/s to 96 frame/s (4× frame repetition): pulldown is 4:4
  • 24 frame/s to 120 frame/s (5× frame repetition): pulldown is 5:5
  • 24 frame/s to 120 frame/s (3:2 pulldown followed by 2× deinterlacing): pulldown is 6:4


Mainframe Entertainment used a novel process for its TV shows. They are rendered at exactly 25.000 frames per second; then, for PAL/SECAM distribution, ordinary 2:2 pulldown is applied, but for NTSC distribution, 199 fields out of every 1001 are repeated. This brings the refresh rate from 25 frames to exactly 60,000/1001, or ~59.94, fields per second, with no change whatsoever in speed, duration, or audio pitch.

Telecine judder edit

The "2:3 pulldown" telecine process creates a slight error in the video signal compared to the original film frames that can be seen in the above image. This is one reason why films viewed on typical NTSC home equipment may not appear as smooth as when viewed in a cinema and PAL home equipment. The effect is particularly apparent in scenes that feature slow, steady camera movements. These appear slightly jerky when viewed in material that has been through the telecine process. The phenomenon is commonly referred to as telecine judder. Reversing the 2:3 pulldown telecine is discussed below.

PAL material in which 2:3 (Euro) pulldown has been applied suffers from a similar lack of smoothness, though this effect is not usually called "telecine judder". Effectively, every 12th film frame is displayed for the duration of three PAL fields (60 milliseconds), whereas the other 11 frames are each displayed for the duration of two PAL fields (40 milliseconds). This causes a slight "hiccup" in the video about twice a second.

Reverse telecine (a.k.a. inverse telecine (IVTC), reverse pulldown) edit

Some DVD players, line doublers, and personal video recorders are designed to detect and remove 2:3 pulldown from telecined video sources, thereby reconstructing the original 24 frame/s film frames. Many video editing programs such as AviSynth also have this ability. This technique is known as reverse telecine, inverse telecine, or detelecine. Benefits of reverse telecine include high-quality non-interlaced display on compatible display devices and the elimination of redundant data for compression purposes.

Reverse telecine is crucial when acquiring film material into a digital non-linear editing system such as Lightworks, Sony Vegas Pro, Avid, or Final Cut Pro, since these machines produce negative cut lists which refer to specific frames in the original film material. When video from a telecine is ingested into these systems, the operator usually has available a "telecine trace", in the form of a text file, which gives the correspondence between the video material and film original. Alternatively, the video transfer may include telecine sequence markers "burned in" to the video image along with other identifying information such as time code.

It is also possible, but more difficult, to perform reverse telecine without prior knowledge of where each field of video lies in the 2:3 pulldown pattern. This is the task faced by most consumer equipment such as line doublers and personal video recorders. Ideally, only a single field needs to be identified, the rest following the pattern in lock-step. However, the 2:3 pulldown pattern does not necessarily remain consistent throughout an entire program. Edits performed on film material after it undergoes 2:3 pulldown can introduce "jumps" in the pattern if care is not taken to preserve the original frame sequence (this often happens during the editing of television shows and commercials in NTSC format). Most reverse telecine algorithms attempt to follow the 2:3 pattern using image analysis techniques, e.g. by searching for repeated fields.

Algorithms that perform 2:3 pulldown removal also usually perform the task of deinterlacing. It is possible to algorithmically determine whether video contains a 2:3 pulldown pattern or not, and selectively do either reverse telecine (in the case of film-sourced video) or bob-deinterlacing (in the case of native video sources).

Telecine hardware edit

Flying spot scanner edit

 
The parts of a flying spot scanner: (A) cathode-ray tube (CRT); (B) film plane; (C) & (D) dichroic mirrors; (E), (F) & (G) red-, green- and blue-sensitive photomultipliers

In the United Kingdom, Rank Precision Industries was experimenting with the flying-spot scanner (FSS), which inverted the cathode ray tube (CRT) concept of scanning using a television screen. The CRT emits a pixel-sized electron beam which is excites phosphors coating the envelope, causing them to glow in red, green, and blue. This dot of light is then focused by a lens onto the film's emulsion and finally collected by a pickup device. In 1950 the first Rank flying spot monochrome telecine was installed at the BBC's Lime Grove Studios.[13] The advantage of the FSS is that color analysis is done after scanning, so there can be no registration errors as can be produced by vidicon tubes where scanning is done after color separation—it also allows simpler dichroics to be used.

In a flying spot scanner (FSS) or cathode-ray tube (CRT) telecine, a pixel-sized light beam is projected through exposed and developed motion picture film (either negative or positive) and collected by a special type of photo-electric cell known as a photomultiplier which converts the light into an electrical signal. The beam of light "scans" across the film image from left to right to record the horizontal frame information. Vertical scanning of the frame is then accomplished by moving the film past the CRT beam. In a color telecine the light from the CRT passes through the film and is separated by dichroic mirrors and filters into red, green and blue bands. Photomultiplier tubes or avalanche photodiodes convert the light into separate red, green and blue electrical signals for further electronic processing. This can be accomplished in real time, 24 frames per second (or in some cases faster). Rank Precision-Cintel introduced the "Mark" series of FSS telecines. During this time advances were also made in CRTs, with increased light output producing a better signal-to-noise ratio and so allowing negative film to be used.

The problem with flying-spot scanners was the difference in frequencies between television field rates and film frame rates. This was solved first by the Mk. I Polygonal Prism system, which was optically synchronised to the television frame rate by the rotating prism and could be run at any frame rate. This was replaced by the Mk. II Twin Lens, and then around 1975, by the Mk. III Hopping Patch (jump scan). The Mk. III series progressed from the original "jump scan" interlace scan to the Mk. IIIB which used a progressive scan and included a digital scan converter (Digiscan) to output interlaced video. The Mk. IIIC was the most popular of the series and used a next-generation Digiscan plus other improvements.

The "Mark" series was then replaced by the Ursa (1989), the first in their line of telecines capable of producing digital data in 4:2:2 color space. The Ursa Gold (1993) stepped this up to 4:4:4 and then the Ursa Diamond (1997), which incorporated many third-party improvements on the Ursa system.[14] Cintel's C-Reality and ITK's Millennium flying-spot scanner are able to do both HD and Data.

Line array CCD edit

 
The parts of a CCD scanner: (A) Xenon bulb; (B) film plane; (C) & (D) prisms and/or dichroic mirrors; (E), (F) & (G) red-, green- and blue-sensitive CCDs.

The Robert Bosch GmbH, Fernseh Div., which later became BTS Inc. – Philips Digital Video Systems, Thomson's Grass Valley and now is DFT Digital Film Technology introduced the world's first CCD telecine (1979), the FDL-60. The FDL-60 designed and made in Darmstadt West Germany, was the first all solid state telecine.

Rank Cintel (ADS telecine 1982) and Marconi Company (1985) both made CCD Telecines for a short time. The Marconi model B3410 telecine sold 84 units over a three-year period,[15] and a former Marconi technician still maintains them.[16]

In a charge-coupled device Line Array CCD telecine, a "white" light is shone through the exposed film image into a prism, which separates out the image into the three primary colors, red, green and blue. Each beam of colored light is then projected at a different CCD, one for each color. The CCD converts the light into electrical impulses which the telecine electronics modulate into a video signal which can then be recorded onto video tape or broadcast.

 
Shadow telecine system, produced by Grass Valley (formerly Thomson, originated from Bosch-Fernseh's inventions), installed at DR, Denmark

Philips-BTS eventually evolved the FDL 60 into the FDL 90 (1989) / Quadra (1993). In 1996 Philips, working with Kodak, introduced the Spirit DataCine (SDC 2000), which was capable of scanning the film image at HDTV resolutions and approaching 2K (1920 Luminance and 960 Chrominace RGB) × 1556 RGB. With the data option the Spirit DataCine can be used as a motion picture film scanner outputting 2K DPX data files as 2048 × 1556 RGB. In 2000 Philips introduced the Shadow Telecine (STE), a low cost version of the Spirit with no Kodak parts. The Spirit DataCine, Cintel's C-Reality and ITK's Millennium opened the door to the technology of digital intermediates, wherein telecine tools were not just used for video outputs, but could now be used for high-resolution data that would later be recorded back out to film.[14] The DFT Digital Film Technology, formerly Grass Valley Spirit 4K/2K/HD (2004) replaced the Spirit 1 Datacine and uses both 2K and 4K line array CCDs. (Note: the SDC-2000 did not use a color prisms and/or dichroic mirrors.) DFT revealed its new scanner at the 2009 NAB Show, Scanity.[17] The Scanity uses time delay integration (TDI) sensor technology for extremely fast and sensitive film scans. High speed scanning 15 frame/s @ 4K; 25 frame/s @ 2K; 44 frame/s @ 1K.

Pulsed LED/triggered three CCD camera system edit

With the manufacturing of new high-power LEDs, came pulsed LED/triggered three CCD camera systems. Flashing the LED light source for a very short time span gives the full-frame CCD camera a stop action of the film, allowing continuous film motion. With CCD video cameras that have a trigger input, the camera now can be electronically synced up to the film transport framing. There are now a number of retail and home made Pulsed LED/triggered camera systems.

An array of high-power multiple red, green and blue LEDs is pulsed just as the film frame is positioned in front of the optical lens. The camera sends the single, non-interlaced image of the film frame to a digital frame store, where the electronic picture is clocked out at the selected TV frame rate for PAL or NTSC or other standards. More advanced systems replace the sprocket wheel with laser or camera-based perf detection and image stabilization system.

Digital intermediate systems and virtual telecines edit

Telecine technology is increasingly merging with that of motion picture film scanners; high-resolution telecines, such as those mentioned above, can be regarded as film scanners that operate in real time.

As digital intermediate post-production becomes more common, the need to combine the traditional telecine functions of input devices, standards converters, and color grading systems is becoming less important as the post-production chain changes to tapeless and filmless operation.

However, the parts of the workflow associated with telecines still remain and are being pushed to the end, rather than the beginning, of the post-production chain, in the form of real-time digital grading systems and digital intermediate mastering systems, increasingly running in software on commodity computer systems. These are sometimes called virtual telecine systems.

Video cameras that produce telecined video, and "film look" edit

Some video cameras and consumer camcorders are able to record in progressive "24 frames/s" or "23.976 frames/s". Such a video has cinema-like motion characteristics and is the major component of the so-called film look.

For most 24 frames/s cameras, the virtual 2:3 pulldown process is happening inside the camera. Although the camera is capturing a progressive frame at the CCD, just like a film camera, it is then imposing an interlacing on the image to record it to tape so that it can be played back on any standard television. Not every camera handles "24 frames/s" this way, but the majority of them do.[18]

Cameras that record 25 frames/s (PAL) or 29.97 frames/s (NTSC) do not need to employ 2:3 pulldown, because every progressive frame occupies exactly two video fields. In the video industry, this type of encoding is called progressive segmented frame (PsF). PsF is conceptually identical to 2:2 pulldown, only there is no film original to transfer from.

Digital television and high definition edit

Digital television and high-definition standards provide several methods for encoding film material. Fifty field/s formats such as 576i50 and 1080i50 can accommodate film content using a 4% speed-up like PAL. 59.94 field/s interlaced formats such as 480i60 and 1080i60 use the same 2:3 pulldown technique as NTSC. In 59.94 frame/s progressive formats such as 480p60 and 720p60, entire frames (rather than fields) are repeated in a 2:3 pattern, accomplishing the frame rate conversion without interlacing and its associated artifacts. Other formats such as 1080p24 can decode film material at its native rate of 24 or 23.976 frame/s.

All of these coding methods are in use to some extent. In PAL countries, 25 frame/s formats remain the norm. In NTSC countries, most digital broadcasts of 24 frame/s progressive material, both standard and high definition, continue to use interlaced formats with 2:3 pulldown, even though ATSC allows native 24 and 23.976 frame/s progressive formats which offer the greatest image quality and coding efficiency, and are widely used in motion picture and high definition video production. Nowadays, most HDTV vendors sell LCD televisions in NTSC/ATSC countries capable of 120 Hz or 240 Hz refresh rates and plasma sets capable of 48, 72, or 96 Hz refresh.[19] When combined with a 1080p24-capable source (such as most Blu-ray Disc players), some of these sets are able to display film-based content using a pulldown scheme of whole multiples of 24, thereby avoiding the problems associated with 2:3 pulldown or the 4% speed-up used in PAL countries. For example, a 1080p 120 Hz set which accepts a 1080p24 input can achieve 5:5 pulldown by simply repeating each frame five times and thus not exhibit picture artifacts associated with telecine judder.

Gate weave edit

Gate weave, known in this context as "telecine weave" or "telecine wobble", caused by the movement of the film in the telecine machine gate, is a characteristic artifact of real-time telecine scanning. Numerous techniques have been tried to minimize gate weave, using both improvements in mechanical film handling and electronic post-processing. Line-scan telecines are less vulnerable to frame-to-frame judder than machines with conventional film gates, and non-real-time machines are also less vulnerable to gate weave than real-time machines. Some gate weave is inherent in film cinematography, as it was introduced by the film handling within the original film camera: modern digital image stabilization techniques can remove both this and telecine/scanner gate weave.

Soft and hard telecine edit

On DVDs, telecined material may be either hard telecined, or soft telecined. In the hard-telecined case, video is stored on the DVD at the playback framerate (29.97 frame/s for NTSC, 25 frame/s for PAL), using the telecined frames as shown above. In the soft-telecined case, the material is stored on the DVD at the film rate (24 or 23.976 frames/s) in the original progressive format, with special flags inserted into the MPEG-2 video stream that instruct the DVD player to repeat certain fields so as to accomplish the required pulldown during playback.[20] Progressive scan DVD players additionally offer output at 480p by using these flags to duplicate frames rather than fields, or if the TV supports it, to play the disc back at the native 24p rate.

NTSC DVDs are often soft telecined, although lower-quality hard-telecined DVDs exist. In the case of PAL DVDs using 2:2 pulldown, the difference between soft and hard telecine vanishes, and the two may be regarded as equal. In the case of PAL DVDs using 2:3 pulldown, either soft or hard telecining may be applied.

Blu-ray offers native 24 frame/s support, allowing 5:5 cadence on most modern televisions.

Image gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ NAB Engineering Handbook. Focal Press. 2007. pp. 1421-ff. ISBN 978-0-240-80751-5.
  2. ^ John, Ellis; Nick, Hall (April 11, 2018). "ADAPT". Figshare. doi:10.17637/rh.c.3925603.v2.
  3. ^ Pincus, Edward and Ascher, Steven. (1984). The Filmmaker's Handbook. Plume. p. 368-9 ISBN 0-452-25526-0
  4. ^ "Convert 24 fps to NTSC and PAL". Gearspace. Retrieved January 1, 2022.
  5. ^ "Home Theater and High Fidelity, Progressive Scan DVDs and deinterlacing".
  6. ^ Poynton, Charles (2003). Charles Poynton, Digital Video and HDTV: Algorithms and Interfaces. Morgan Kaufmann. ISBN 9781558607927., page 430
  7. ^ lorihollasch (June 3, 2021). "D3D11_1DDI_VIDEO_PROCESSOR_ITELECINE_CAPS (d3d10umddi.h) - Windows drivers". learn.microsoft.com. Retrieved June 16, 2023.
  8. ^ "2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:2:3 Pulldown - AfterDawn: Glossary of technology terms & acronyms". www.afterdawn.com. Retrieved June 16, 2023.
  9. ^ Poynton, Charles (February 27, 2012). Digital Video and HD: Algorithms and Interfaces. Elsevier. p. 586. ISBN 978-0-12-391932-8.
  10. ^ "7.1. Making a high quality MPEG-4 ("DivX") rip of a DVD movie". mplayerhq.hu.
  11. ^ "The DVD-Video Bible, Written by @rlaphoenix". Gist. Retrieved June 16, 2023.
  12. ^ "1080/24 at 48Hz, 96Hz, or 120Hz". highdefdigest.com.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on December 9, 2007. Retrieved July 15, 2019.
  14. ^ a b Holben, Jay (May 1999). "From Film to Tape" American Cinematographer Magazine, pp. 108–122.
  15. ^ "Digital Library". smpte.org.
  16. ^ "Marconi B3410 Telecine For Sale". marconitelecine.com.
  17. ^ DFT Scanity June 18, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on October 25, 2007.
  19. ^ "Displays that support 1080p/24 signal at multiplies of the original frame rate". avsforum.com.
  20. ^ . ComingSoon.net. 6 October 2015. Archived from the original on 5 January 2009. Retrieved 21 December 2008.

External links edit

  • Discussion of Telecine equipment by former BBC engineers
  • Demonstration of Telecine process by telecine and archiving expert, Tim Emlem-English
  • Explanation of telecine methods

telecine, this, article, about, device, information, about, method, movie, copying, copying, television, network, brazil, rede, process, transferring, film, into, video, performed, color, suite, term, also, used, refer, equipment, used, this, post, production,. This article is about the device For information about the method of movie copying see Telecine copying For the television network in Brazil see Rede Telecine Telecine ˈ t ɛ l e s ɪ n eɪ or ˌ t ɛ l e ˈ s ɪ n eɪ is the process of transferring film into video and is performed in a color suite The term is also used to refer to the equipment used in this post production process 1 Spirit DataCine 4K with the doors openTelecine enables a motion picture captured originally on film stock to be viewed with standard video equipment such as television sets video cassette recorders VCR DVD Blu ray Disc or computers Initially this allowed television broadcasters to produce programs using film usually 16 mm stock but transmit them in the same format and quality as other forms of television production 2 Furthermore telecine allows film producers television producers and film distributors working in the film industry to release their productions on video and allows producers to use video production equipment to complete their filmmaking projects Within the film industry it is also referred to as a TK because TC is already used to designate timecode Motion picture film scanners are similar to telecines Contents 1 History 2 Frame rate differences 2 1 2 2 pulldown 2 2 2 3 pulldown 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 pulldown 2 4 Other pulldown patterns 2 5 Telecine judder 2 6 Reverse telecine a k a inverse telecine IVTC reverse pulldown 3 Telecine hardware 3 1 Flying spot scanner 3 2 Line array CCD 3 3 Pulsed LED triggered three CCD camera system 3 4 Digital intermediate systems and virtual telecines 3 5 Video cameras that produce telecined video and film look 4 Digital television and high definition 5 Gate weave 6 Soft and hard telecine 7 Image gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editWith the advent of popular broadcast television producers realized they needed more than live television programming By turning to film originated material they would have access to the wealth of films made for the cinema in addition to recorded television programming on film that could be aired at different times However the difference in frame rates between film generally 24 frames s and television 30 or 25 frames s interlaced meant that simply playing a film into a television camera would result in flickering The kinescope was used to record the image from a television display to film synchronized to the TV scan rate The film could then be shown directly into a video camera for retransmission 3 Non live programming could also be filmed using the kinescope edited mechanically as normal and then played back for TV As the film was run at the same speed as the television the flickering was eliminated Various displays including projectors for these video rate films slide projectors and film cameras were often combined into a film chain allowing the broadcaster to cue up various forms of media and switch between them by moving a mirror or prism Color was supported by using a multi tube video camera prisms and filters to separate the original color signal and feed the red green and blue to individual tubes However this still left film shot at cinema frame rates as a problem The obvious solution is to simply speed up the film to match the television frame rates but this at least in the case of NTSC requires a change that is rather obvious to the eye and ear The simple solution is to periodically play a selected frame twice For NTSC the difference in frame rates can be corrected by showing every fourth frame of film twice This solution does require the sound to be handled separately A more advanced technique is to use 2 3 pulldown discussed below which turns every second frame of the film into three fields of video which results in a slightly smoother display PAL uses a similar system 2 2 pulldown However during the analog broadcasting period the 24 frames per second film was shown at a slightly faster 25 frames per second rate to match the PAL video signal This resulted in a fractionally higher pitched audio soundtrack and resulted in feature films having a slightly shorter duration by being shown 1 frame per second faster In recent decades telecine has primarily been a film to storage process as opposed to film to air Changes since the 1950s have primarily been in terms of equipment and physical formats the basic concept remains the same Home movies originally on film may be transferred to video tape using this technique Frame rate differences editMain article Frame rate The most complex part of telecine is the synchronization of the mechanical film motion and the electronic video signal Every time the video tele part of the telecine samples the light electronically the film cine part of the telecine must have a frame in perfect registration and ready to photograph This is relatively easy when the film is photographed at the same frame rate as the video camera will sample but when this is not true a sophisticated procedure is required to change frame rate To avoid the synchronization issues higher end establishments now use a scanning system rather than just a telecine system This allows them to scan a distinct frame of digital video for each frame of film providing higher quality than a telecine system would be able to achieve Similar issues occur when using vertical synchronization to prevent screen tearing which is a different problem encountered when frame rates mismatch 2 2 pulldown edit nbsp 2 2 pulldown diagram A B to A A B B In countries that use the PAL or SECAM video standards film destined for television is photographed at 25 frames per second The PAL video standard broadcasts at 25 frames per second so the transfer from film to video is simple for every film frame one video frame is captured Theatrical features originally photographed at 24 frame s are shown at 25 frame s While this is usually not noticed in the picture but may be more noticeable during action speed especially if footage was filmed undercranked with the camera recording at a frame rate lower than the expected playback speed the 4 increase in playback speed causes a slightly noticeable increase in audio pitch by about 0 707 semitones With the use of digital audio workstations this can be avoided using time stretching algorithms which speed up audio while preserving pitch although this method may introduce audible artifacts especially on complex materials To mitigate the audio artifacts time stretching can be applied separately to each production stem dialog effects background and music if available 4 2 2 pulldown is also used to transfer shows and films photographed at 30 frames per second like Friends and Oklahoma 1955 5 to NTSC video which has 59 94 Hz scanning rate This requires playback speed to be slowed by a tenth of a percent 2 3 pulldown edit Main article Three two pull down nbsp 2 3 pulldown diagram A B C D to A A B B B C C D D D In the United States and other countries where television uses the 59 94 Hz vertical scanning frequency video is broadcast at 29 97 frame s For the film s motion to be accurately rendered on the video signal a telecine must use a technique called the 2 3 pulldown also known as 3 2 pulldown to convert from 24 to 29 97 frame s The term pulldown comes from the mechanical process of pulling physically moving the film downward within the film portion of the transport mechanism to advance it from one frame to the next at a given rate nominally 24 frames s This is accomplished in two steps The first step is to slow down the film motion by 1 1000 to 24 000 1001 23 976 frames s The difference in speed is imperceptible to the viewer For a two hour film play time is extended by 7 2 seconds If the total playback time must be kept exact a single frame can be dropped every 1000 frames The second step of the 2 3 pulldown is distributing cinema frames into video fields At 23 976 frame s there are four frames of film for every five frames of 29 97 frame s video 23 976 29 97 4 5 displaystyle frac 23 976 29 97 frac 4 5 nbsp These four frames are stretched into five by exploiting the interlaced nature of 60 Hz video For every frame there are actually two incomplete images or fields one for the odd numbered lines of the image and one for the even numbered lines There are therefore ten fields for every four film frames which are called A B C and D The telecine alternately places frame A across two fields frame B across three fields frame C across two fields and frame D across three fields This can be written as A A B B B C C D D D or 2 3 2 3 or simply 2 3 The cycle repeats itself completely after four film frames A 3 2 pulldown pattern is identical to the one shown above except that it is shifted by one frame For instance a cycle that starts with film frame B yields a 3 2 pattern B B B C C D D D A A or 3 2 3 2 or simply 3 2 In other words there is no difference between the 2 3 and 3 2 patterns In fact the 3 2 notation is misleading because according to SMPTE standards for every four frame film sequence the first frame is scanned twice not three times 6 The above method is a classic 2 3 which was used before frame buffers allowed for holding more than one frame The preferred method for doing a 2 3 creates only one dirty frame in every five i e 3 3 2 2 or 2 3 3 2 or 2 2 3 3 while this method has slightly more judder it allows for easier upconversion the dirty frame can be dropped without losing information and a better overall compression when encoding The 2 3 3 2 pattern is supported by the Panasonic DVX 100B video camera under the name Advanced Pulldown Note that just fields are displayed no frames hence no dirty frames in interlaced display such as on a CRT Dirty frames may appear in other methods of displaying the interlaced video 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 pulldown edit A new method called 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 Euro 12 1 or 24 1 pulldown 7 8 9 can be used in order to convert 24 frame s material to 25 frame s 10 11 Usually this involves a film to PAL transfer without the aforementioned 4 speedup For film at 24 frame s there are 24 frames of film for every 25 frames of PAL video In order to accommodate this mismatch in frame rate 24 frames of film have to be distributed over 50 PAL fields This can be accomplished by inserting a pulldown field every 12 frames thus effectively spreading 12 frames of film over 25 fields or 12 5 frames of PAL video This method was born out of a frustration with the faster higher pitched soundtracks that traditionally accompanied films transferred for PAL and SECAM audiences A few motion pictures are beginning to be telecined this way citation needed It is particularly suited for films where the soundtrack is of special importance Other pulldown patterns edit Similar techniques must be used for films shot at silent speeds of less than 24 frame s which includes home movie formats the standard for Standard 8 mm film was 16 fps and 18 fps for Super 8 mm film as well as silent film which in 35 mm format usually was 16 fps 12 fps or even lower 16 frame s actually 15 984 to NTSC 30 frame s actually 29 97 pulldown should be 3 4 4 4 or the film may be run at 15 frame s actually 14 985 then pulldown should be 4 4 As motion pictures shot at this framerate are silent there is no audio that is affected 16 frame s to PAL 25 pulldown should be 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 if the film playback rate is increased to 16 frame s 1 000 frames per minute pulldown is simplified to 3 3 18 frame s slowed to 17 982 to NTSC 30 pulldown should be 3 3 4 20 frame s slowed to 19 98 to NTSC 30 pulldown should be 3 3 20 frame s to PAL 25 pulldown should be 3 2 27 5 frame s to NTSC 30 pulldown should be 3 2 2 2 2 27 5 frame s to PAL 25 pulldown should be 1 2 2 2 2Also other patterns have been described that refer to the progressive frame rate conversion required to display 24 frame s video e g from a DVD player on a progressive display e g LCD or plasma 12 24 frame s to 96 frame s 4 frame repetition pulldown is 4 4 24 frame s to 120 frame s 5 frame repetition pulldown is 5 5 24 frame s to 120 frame s 3 2 pulldown followed by 2 deinterlacing pulldown is 6 4Mainframe Entertainment used a novel process for its TV shows They are rendered at exactly 25 000 frames per second then for PAL SECAM distribution ordinary 2 2 pulldown is applied but for NTSC distribution 199 fields out of every 1001 are repeated This brings the refresh rate from 25 frames to exactly 60 000 1001 or 59 94 fields per second with no change whatsoever in speed duration or audio pitch Telecine judder edit The 2 3 pulldown telecine process creates a slight error in the video signal compared to the original film frames that can be seen in the above image This is one reason why films viewed on typical NTSC home equipment may not appear as smooth as when viewed in a cinema and PAL home equipment The effect is particularly apparent in scenes that feature slow steady camera movements These appear slightly jerky when viewed in material that has been through the telecine process The phenomenon is commonly referred to as telecine judder Reversing the 2 3 pulldown telecine is discussed below PAL material in which 2 3 Euro pulldown has been applied suffers from a similar lack of smoothness though this effect is not usually called telecine judder Effectively every 12th film frame is displayed for the duration of three PAL fields 60 milliseconds whereas the other 11 frames are each displayed for the duration of two PAL fields 40 milliseconds This causes a slight hiccup in the video about twice a second Reverse telecine a k a inverse telecine IVTC reverse pulldown edit Some DVD players line doublers and personal video recorders are designed to detect and remove 2 3 pulldown from telecined video sources thereby reconstructing the original 24 frame s film frames Many video editing programs such as AviSynth also have this ability This technique is known as reverse telecine inverse telecine or detelecine Benefits of reverse telecine include high quality non interlaced display on compatible display devices and the elimination of redundant data for compression purposes Reverse telecine is crucial when acquiring film material into a digital non linear editing system such as Lightworks Sony Vegas Pro Avid or Final Cut Pro since these machines produce negative cut lists which refer to specific frames in the original film material When video from a telecine is ingested into these systems the operator usually has available a telecine trace in the form of a text file which gives the correspondence between the video material and film original Alternatively the video transfer may include telecine sequence markers burned in to the video image along with other identifying information such as time code It is also possible but more difficult to perform reverse telecine without prior knowledge of where each field of video lies in the 2 3 pulldown pattern This is the task faced by most consumer equipment such as line doublers and personal video recorders Ideally only a single field needs to be identified the rest following the pattern in lock step However the 2 3 pulldown pattern does not necessarily remain consistent throughout an entire program Edits performed on film material after it undergoes 2 3 pulldown can introduce jumps in the pattern if care is not taken to preserve the original frame sequence this often happens during the editing of television shows and commercials in NTSC format Most reverse telecine algorithms attempt to follow the 2 3 pattern using image analysis techniques e g by searching for repeated fields Algorithms that perform 2 3 pulldown removal also usually perform the task of deinterlacing It is possible to algorithmically determine whether video contains a 2 3 pulldown pattern or not and selectively do either reverse telecine in the case of film sourced video or bob deinterlacing in the case of native video sources Telecine hardware editFlying spot scanner edit nbsp The parts of a flying spot scanner A cathode ray tube CRT B film plane C amp D dichroic mirrors E F amp G red green and blue sensitive photomultipliersIn the United Kingdom Rank Precision Industries was experimenting with the flying spot scanner FSS which inverted the cathode ray tube CRT concept of scanning using a television screen The CRT emits a pixel sized electron beam which is excites phosphors coating the envelope causing them to glow in red green and blue This dot of light is then focused by a lens onto the film s emulsion and finally collected by a pickup device In 1950 the first Rank flying spot monochrome telecine was installed at the BBC s Lime Grove Studios 13 The advantage of the FSS is that color analysis is done after scanning so there can be no registration errors as can be produced by vidicon tubes where scanning is done after color separation it also allows simpler dichroics to be used In a flying spot scanner FSS or cathode ray tube CRT telecine a pixel sized light beam is projected through exposed and developed motion picture film either negative or positive and collected by a special type of photo electric cell known as a photomultiplier which converts the light into an electrical signal The beam of light scans across the film image from left to right to record the horizontal frame information Vertical scanning of the frame is then accomplished by moving the film past the CRT beam In a color telecine the light from the CRT passes through the film and is separated by dichroic mirrors and filters into red green and blue bands Photomultiplier tubes or avalanche photodiodes convert the light into separate red green and blue electrical signals for further electronic processing This can be accomplished in real time 24 frames per second or in some cases faster Rank Precision Cintel introduced the Mark series of FSS telecines During this time advances were also made in CRTs with increased light output producing a better signal to noise ratio and so allowing negative film to be used The problem with flying spot scanners was the difference in frequencies between television field rates and film frame rates This was solved first by the Mk I Polygonal Prism system which was optically synchronised to the television frame rate by the rotating prism and could be run at any frame rate This was replaced by the Mk II Twin Lens and then around 1975 by the Mk III Hopping Patch jump scan The Mk III series progressed from the original jump scan interlace scan to the Mk IIIB which used a progressive scan and included a digital scan converter Digiscan to output interlaced video The Mk IIIC was the most popular of the series and used a next generation Digiscan plus other improvements The Mark series was then replaced by the Ursa 1989 the first in their line of telecines capable of producing digital data in 4 2 2 color space The Ursa Gold 1993 stepped this up to 4 4 4 and then the Ursa Diamond 1997 which incorporated many third party improvements on the Ursa system 14 Cintel s C Reality and ITK s Millennium flying spot scanner are able to do both HD and Data Line array CCD edit nbsp The parts of a CCD scanner A Xenon bulb B film plane C amp D prisms and or dichroic mirrors E F amp G red green and blue sensitive CCDs The Robert Bosch GmbH Fernseh Div which later became BTS Inc Philips Digital Video Systems Thomson s Grass Valley and now is DFT Digital Film Technology introduced the world s first CCD telecine 1979 the FDL 60 The FDL 60 designed and made in Darmstadt West Germany was the first all solid state telecine Rank Cintel ADS telecine 1982 and Marconi Company 1985 both made CCD Telecines for a short time The Marconi model B3410 telecine sold 84 units over a three year period 15 and a former Marconi technician still maintains them 16 In a charge coupled device Line Array CCD telecine a white light is shone through the exposed film image into a prism which separates out the image into the three primary colors red green and blue Each beam of colored light is then projected at a different CCD one for each color The CCD converts the light into electrical impulses which the telecine electronics modulate into a video signal which can then be recorded onto video tape or broadcast nbsp Shadow telecine system produced by Grass Valley formerly Thomson originated from Bosch Fernseh s inventions installed at DR DenmarkPhilips BTS eventually evolved the FDL 60 into the FDL 90 1989 Quadra 1993 In 1996 Philips working with Kodak introduced the Spirit DataCine SDC 2000 which was capable of scanning the film image at HDTV resolutions and approaching 2K 1920 Luminance and 960 Chrominace RGB 1556 RGB With the data option the Spirit DataCine can be used as a motion picture film scanner outputting 2K DPX data files as 2048 1556 RGB In 2000 Philips introduced the Shadow Telecine STE a low cost version of the Spirit with no Kodak parts The Spirit DataCine Cintel s C Reality and ITK s Millennium opened the door to the technology of digital intermediates wherein telecine tools were not just used for video outputs but could now be used for high resolution data that would later be recorded back out to film 14 The DFT Digital Film Technology formerly Grass Valley Spirit 4K 2K HD 2004 replaced the Spirit 1 Datacine and uses both 2K and 4K line array CCDs Note the SDC 2000 did not use a color prisms and or dichroic mirrors DFT revealed its new scanner at the 2009 NAB Show Scanity 17 The Scanity uses time delay integration TDI sensor technology for extremely fast and sensitive film scans High speed scanning 15 frame s 4K 25 frame s 2K 44 frame s 1K Pulsed LED triggered three CCD camera system edit With the manufacturing of new high power LEDs came pulsed LED triggered three CCD camera systems Flashing the LED light source for a very short time span gives the full frame CCD camera a stop action of the film allowing continuous film motion With CCD video cameras that have a trigger input the camera now can be electronically synced up to the film transport framing There are now a number of retail and home made Pulsed LED triggered camera systems An array of high power multiple red green and blue LEDs is pulsed just as the film frame is positioned in front of the optical lens The camera sends the single non interlaced image of the film frame to a digital frame store where the electronic picture is clocked out at the selected TV frame rate for PAL or NTSC or other standards More advanced systems replace the sprocket wheel with laser or camera based perf detection and image stabilization system Digital intermediate systems and virtual telecines edit Telecine technology is increasingly merging with that of motion picture film scanners high resolution telecines such as those mentioned above can be regarded as film scanners that operate in real time As digital intermediate post production becomes more common the need to combine the traditional telecine functions of input devices standards converters and color grading systems is becoming less important as the post production chain changes to tapeless and filmless operation However the parts of the workflow associated with telecines still remain and are being pushed to the end rather than the beginning of the post production chain in the form of real time digital grading systems and digital intermediate mastering systems increasingly running in software on commodity computer systems These are sometimes called virtual telecine systems Video cameras that produce telecined video and film look edit Parts of this article those related to this section need to be updated The reason given is Lots of the section refers to cameras that presumably pre date 1080p and interlacing as though standard televisions need it Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2022 Some video cameras and consumer camcorders are able to record in progressive 24 frames s or 23 976 frames s Such a video has cinema like motion characteristics and is the major component of the so called film look For most 24 frames s cameras the virtual 2 3 pulldown process is happening inside the camera Although the camera is capturing a progressive frame at the CCD just like a film camera it is then imposing an interlacing on the image to record it to tape so that it can be played back on any standard television Not every camera handles 24 frames s this way but the majority of them do 18 Cameras that record 25 frames s PAL or 29 97 frames s NTSC do not need to employ 2 3 pulldown because every progressive frame occupies exactly two video fields In the video industry this type of encoding is called progressive segmented frame PsF PsF is conceptually identical to 2 2 pulldown only there is no film original to transfer from Digital television and high definition editDigital television and high definition standards provide several methods for encoding film material Fifty field s formats such as 576i50 and 1080i50 can accommodate film content using a 4 speed up like PAL 59 94 field s interlaced formats such as 480i60 and 1080i60 use the same 2 3 pulldown technique as NTSC In 59 94 frame s progressive formats such as 480p60 and 720p60 entire frames rather than fields are repeated in a 2 3 pattern accomplishing the frame rate conversion without interlacing and its associated artifacts Other formats such as 1080p24 can decode film material at its native rate of 24 or 23 976 frame s All of these coding methods are in use to some extent In PAL countries 25 frame s formats remain the norm In NTSC countries most digital broadcasts of 24 frame s progressive material both standard and high definition continue to use interlaced formats with 2 3 pulldown even though ATSC allows native 24 and 23 976 frame s progressive formats which offer the greatest image quality and coding efficiency and are widely used in motion picture and high definition video production Nowadays most HDTV vendors sell LCD televisions in NTSC ATSC countries capable of 120 Hz or 240 Hz refresh rates and plasma sets capable of 48 72 or 96 Hz refresh 19 When combined with a 1080p24 capable source such as most Blu ray Disc players some of these sets are able to display film based content using a pulldown scheme of whole multiples of 24 thereby avoiding the problems associated with 2 3 pulldown or the 4 speed up used in PAL countries For example a 1080p 120 Hz set which accepts a 1080p24 input can achieve 5 5 pulldown by simply repeating each frame five times and thus not exhibit picture artifacts associated with telecine judder Gate weave editGate weave known in this context as telecine weave or telecine wobble caused by the movement of the film in the telecine machine gate is a characteristic artifact of real time telecine scanning Numerous techniques have been tried to minimize gate weave using both improvements in mechanical film handling and electronic post processing Line scan telecines are less vulnerable to frame to frame judder than machines with conventional film gates and non real time machines are also less vulnerable to gate weave than real time machines Some gate weave is inherent in film cinematography as it was introduced by the film handling within the original film camera modern digital image stabilization techniques can remove both this and telecine scanner gate weave Soft and hard telecine editOn DVDs telecined material may be either hard telecined or soft telecined In the hard telecined case video is stored on the DVD at the playback framerate 29 97 frame s for NTSC 25 frame s for PAL using the telecined frames as shown above In the soft telecined case the material is stored on the DVD at the film rate 24 or 23 976 frames s in the original progressive format with special flags inserted into the MPEG 2 video stream that instruct the DVD player to repeat certain fields so as to accomplish the required pulldown during playback 20 Progressive scan DVD players additionally offer output at 480p by using these flags to duplicate frames rather than fields or if the TV supports it to play the disc back at the native 24p rate NTSC DVDs are often soft telecined although lower quality hard telecined DVDs exist In the case of PAL DVDs using 2 2 pulldown the difference between soft and hard telecine vanishes and the two may be regarded as equal In the case of PAL DVDs using 2 3 pulldown either soft or hard telecining may be applied Blu ray offers native 24 frame s support allowing 5 5 cadence on most modern televisions Image gallery edit nbsp Bosch Fernseh FDL 60 Telecine Film Deck and Lens Gate nbsp Quadra Telecine Film Deck nbsp Rank Cintel Mark 3 Telecine nbsp Cintel URSA Diamond Telecine nbsp Cintel C Reality Film Deck Telecine nbsp Innovation TK Ltd Millennium Telecine Machine nbsp SDC 2000 Spirit DataCine Functional Control Panel FCP nbsp Spirit Datacine 4k with the doors closed nbsp Spirit Datacine 4k with the doors open nbsp GCP control panel for a Spirit Datacine nbsp A telecine roomSee also edit3D LUT Cintel telecine equipment Color motion picture film Color suite Da Vinci Systems for color grading and video editing systems Digital intermediate Display motion blur factors causing motion blur on displays Display resolution Faroudja inventors of reverse telecine technologies Film out Film recorder Film restoration Gamma correction Hard disk recorder Image scanner Keykode Pandora International Progressive segmented frame a scheme designed to acquire store modify and distribute progressive scan video using interlaced equipment and media Sound follower Telecine piracy an unauthorized copy of a film created with a telecine Telerecording UK Television Test filmReferences edit NAB Engineering Handbook Focal Press 2007 pp 1421 ff ISBN 978 0 240 80751 5 John Ellis Nick Hall April 11 2018 ADAPT Figshare doi 10 17637 rh c 3925603 v2 Pincus Edward and Ascher Steven 1984 The Filmmaker s Handbook Plume p 368 9 ISBN 0 452 25526 0 Convert 24 fps to NTSC and PAL Gearspace Retrieved January 1 2022 Home Theater and High Fidelity Progressive Scan DVDs and deinterlacing Poynton Charles 2003 Charles Poynton Digital Video and HDTV Algorithms and Interfaces Morgan Kaufmann ISBN 9781558607927 page 430 lorihollasch June 3 2021 D3D11 1DDI VIDEO PROCESSOR ITELECINE CAPS d3d10umddi h Windows drivers learn microsoft com Retrieved June 16 2023 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 Pulldown AfterDawn Glossary of technology terms amp acronyms www afterdawn com Retrieved June 16 2023 Poynton Charles February 27 2012 Digital Video and HD Algorithms and Interfaces Elsevier p 586 ISBN 978 0 12 391932 8 7 1 Making a high quality MPEG 4 DivX rip of a DVD movie mplayerhq hu The DVD Video Bible Written by rlaphoenix Gist Retrieved June 16 2023 1080 24 at 48Hz 96Hz or 120Hz highdefdigest com Some key dates in Cintel s history Archived from the original on December 9 2007 Retrieved July 15 2019 a b Holben Jay May 1999 From Film to Tape American Cinematographer Magazine pp 108 122 Digital Library smpte org Marconi B3410 Telecine For Sale marconitelecine com DFT Scanity Archived June 18 2009 at the Wayback Machine Jay Holben More Detail on 24p Archived from the original on October 25 2007 Displays that support 1080p 24 signal at multiplies of the original frame rate avsforum com Coming Soon To DVD Find Out DVD Release Dates ComingSoon net 6 October 2015 Archived from the original on 5 January 2009 Retrieved 21 December 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Telecine Discussion of Telecine equipment by former BBC engineers Demonstration of Telecine process by telecine and archiving expert Tim Emlem English Explanation of telecine methods Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Telecine amp oldid 1190058164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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