I suspect it's a mislabeled re-release of the telecine. From Wordnik.com. [Pirating the 2009 Oscars - Waxy.org] Reference
Visual effects and telecine were brilliantly handled at Framestore. From Wordnik.com. [No Fat Clips!!! : Monster.com: Stork] Reference
There's also the telecine method, but that's catered more toward video production/broadcasting. From Wordnik.com. [Regal Cinemas To Go 4K Digital | /Film] Reference
A film leader is a length of film attached to the head or tail of a film to assist in threading a projector or telecine. From Wordnik.com. [No Fat Clips!!! : MICHAEL ROBINSON – Hand Painted Film Leader #2] Reference
We shot it on Super-16 in 16:9 widescreen, but ITV decreed that the broadcast master be a 14:9 telecine transfer on digital tape. From Wordnik.com. [Soundscapes and Wide Screens] Reference
This is usually caused by NTSC telecine (3: 2: 3: 2). From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
Inverse telecine (2: 2 and 3: 2 pull-down correction). From Wordnik.com. [AMDZone Frontpage] Reference
A decent TV will inverse telecine or smart deinterlace. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
METiON's was a telecine, do you not know the signs of one?. From Wordnik.com. [Releaselog | RLSLOG.net] Reference
High quality adaptative field matching for hard telecine. From Wordnik.com. [Doom9's Forum] Reference
Uncheck "Detect soft telecine and average frame durations". From Wordnik.com. [Doom9's Forum] Reference
< - > NTSC conversion, change field dominance, inverse telecine. From Wordnik.com. [VersionTracker: Mac OS X] Reference
You can enjoy it the way I first enjoyed it in the telecine room. From Wordnik.com. [Paste Magazine] Reference
What I know of telecine is just the standard "Anime" 3: 2 pulldown. From Wordnik.com. [Doom9's Forum] Reference
Or, if you want to, you can add a reverse telecine and work at 23.98. From Wordnik.com. [Discussions: Message List - root] Reference
The image is also slightly jittery, perhaps on account of the telecine process. From Wordnik.com. [DVD Times] Reference
It seems that more and more people are creating telecine machines for their own use. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
It was a huge advantage to be able to go straight from the telecine and into my machine. From Wordnik.com. [Adland] Reference
This removes the telecine judder and provides a better foundation for frame interpolation. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
The telecine from the lab was horrible, so I did what I could to try and recover it in post. From Wordnik.com. [Vimeo / Recent Public Videos] Reference
Soft telecine - the stream is encoded at 24 fps and the pulldown is applied during playback. From Wordnik.com. [Doom9's Forum] Reference
Hard telecine - your source was telecined before being encoded on the DVD (or before airing). From Wordnik.com. [Doom9's Forum] Reference
Now you can have telecine-style color correction that fits your workflow rather than imposing. From Wordnik.com. [AvaxHome RSS:/] Reference
In addition to noise removal for telecine video, the DNE-2 can also be used for improving S / N. From Wordnik.com. [B&C - Breaking News] Reference
Maybe I'm seeing the mechanics of the old fashioned telecine system in a rather simplistic way. From Wordnik.com. [Home Theater Forum] Reference
And perhaps he could explain what the benefits are to making a low contrast telecine to begin with?. From Wordnik.com. [Home Theater Forum] Reference
If it shows Pics / s as 23.976, Frames / s as 29.97, and Fields / s as 59.94, then it's soft telecine. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
After the reverse telecine, are you reconnecting the edited sequence to the new reverse-telecined clips?. From Wordnik.com. [Discussions: Message List - root] Reference
I have been dabbling with home telecine and I have a set up that captures images pretty well with Cinecap. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
These were all shot and edited on film in those days but telecine transferred to Quad video tape after editing. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
I often see people use the terms deinterlace and inverse-telecine as if they mean the same thing, but they don't. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
And for NTSC they do the same telecine process to the frames as they do on any other film content to bring the fps to 29.97 fps. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
If your TV has HDMI then check the manual for resolutions accepted. 1080i can work well if the HDTV does a good inverse telecine. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
Telecined material should be treated as interlaced unless an inverse-telecine is performed to return it to it's progressive state. From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
NTSC to PAL looks A-OK only when the original NTSC is 23. 976fps progressive (or can be made that way by doing an inverse telecine). From Wordnik.com. [VideoHelp.com Forum] Reference
Like all Niagara appliances, the unit features image scaling, cropping, d-interlacing, inverse telecine, and closed-caption rendering. From Wordnik.com. [Broadcast Engineering RSS Feed] Reference
Like all Niagara appliances, the unit features image scaling, cropping, de-interlacing, inverse telecine and closed caption rendering. From Wordnik.com. [UK Regional Film and Television News] Reference
Grover Crisp from Sony gave a demonstration of hi-def telecine to members of the Home Theater Forum at the EMA Show in Las Vegas in 2007. From Wordnik.com. [Home Theater Forum] Reference
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