I hate videos that could have been articles (talking heads), and I did not watch this.
However, I have an opinion: in probably countless ways.
3D-ification, which is already a thing
AI-powered user interaction with the film, a-la camera control
Upscaling to 128k resolution, whenever that becomes common
Immersion. Be one of the characters (although, this might just be a variation on #2)
As deep learning hardware and software improves and gets cheaper, I expect doing any or all of these to become increasingly common, and far cheaper than buying the IP and reshooting it, and studios will turn to these as cheap ways to milk the cash cow. Someone will inevitably film another re-imagining, whether with real people or (eventually) entirely deep learning from script to direction to actors; but that won’t stop copyright holders of a given film from trying ways to get people to rebuy new versions of old films.
I hate videos that could have been articles (talking heads), and I did not watch this.
However, I have an opinion: in probably countless ways.
As deep learning hardware and software improves and gets cheaper, I expect doing any or all of these to become increasingly common, and far cheaper than buying the IP and reshooting it, and studios will turn to these as cheap ways to milk the cash cow. Someone will inevitably film another re-imagining, whether with real people or (eventually) entirely deep learning from script to direction to actors; but that won’t stop copyright holders of a given film from trying ways to get people to rebuy new versions of old films.
This is not a video which could have been an article, it is mainly side-by-side video comparisons
Interesting choice for a title, then.
Why? It’s specifically about the attempts to remaster it.