I’ve been re-watching star trek voyager recently, and I’ve heard when filming, they didn’t clear the wide angle of filming equipment, so it’s not as simple as just going back to the original film. With the advancement of AI, is it only a matter of time until older programs like this are released with more updated formats?

And if yes, do you think AI could also upgrade to 4K. So theoretically you could change a SD 4:3 program and make it 4k 16:9.

I’d imagine it would be easier for the early episodes of Futurama for example due to it being a cartoon and therefore less detailed.

  • CaptainBlagbird@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    I think it would be possible. But adding previously unseen stuff would be changing/redirecting the movie/show.

    Each scene is set up and framed deliberately by the director, should AI just change that? It’s a similar problem like with pan-and-scan, where content was removed to fit 4:3.

    You wouldn’t want to add content to the left and right of the Mona Lisa, would you? And if so what? Continuing the landscape, which adds just more uninteresting parts? Now she is in a vast space, and you already changed the tone of the painting. Or would you add other people? This removes the focus from her, which is even worse. Well this is just a one frame example, there are even more problems with moving pictures.

    It would be an interesting experiment, but imo it wouldn’t improve the quality of the medium, in contrary.

    • Pechente@feddit.de
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      11 months ago

      But adding previously unseen stuff would be changing/redirecting the movie/show.

      You could see this with The Wire 16:9 remake. They rescanned the original negatives that were shot in 16:9 but framed and cropped to 4:3. As a result the framing felt a bit off and the whole thing felt a bit awkward / amateurish.

    • RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Sometimes thats true, but not all things in a shot are very important. There may be buildings or plants or people whose placement in the shot is not important. They only exist in the shot to communicate that the film is happening in a real living world. 99% of directors don’t care about where a tree in the background is, unless the tree is the subject of the shot.

      Ai improving a shot would be debatable, but it is definitely possible. 4:3 media on a 16:9 display is pretty annoying to most people seeing the black bars on the sides. Even if the AI only adds backgrounds or landscapes, simply removing the black bars would be an improvement enough for most viewers.

      • SSTF@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        If the AI is only drawing in unimportant objects, I wonder what the value is?

        At the risk of ruining the original framing, the potential gain is stuff you aren’t supposed to focus on?

        Who is out there watching classic TV shows who isn’t adapted to the old framing?

    • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      11 months ago

      The only thing that would seem wrong is that the actors stand closer than they have to. But other than that, I doubt many would notice.