Re: Sliders DVD Releases (Universal, Mill Creek, SD blu-ray, Restoration)
I'll let RussianCabbie weigh in on Peacock.
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Before I get back into SLIDERS upscaling, I've been running some experiments with episodes of THE DEAD ZONE to better understand what Topaz is doing with these various presets.
THE DEAD ZONE from 2002 - 2004 (Seasons 1 - 3) was shot on 16mm and edited on high definition videotape that was then downscaled to standard definition for broadcast and for DVDs. As a result, the first three seasons have a filmic graininess that would have looked really sharp on standard definition televisions. In addition, on-the-fly upscaling disc players can render the image quite well for HDTV playback, removing most of the compression artifacts. And the graininess allows Topaz to render all that grain into crisp pixel detail. The Artemis HQ preset works effectively on these episodes and leaves some of that grain intact, restoring all the crisp detail of the original 16mm film. A 1080p rescan of the film wouldn't look much different.
SLIDERS in Seasons 2- 5 were were edited in a standard definition DV format, not HDV, so upscales don't match THE DEAD ZONE's quality. However, it speaks to how digital videotape, even in standard definition, proved to be a massive visual leap forward; digital videotape has proven so resilient that even under Mill Creek's overcompression, Seasons 2 - 5 episodes were still upscalable.
THE DEAD ZONE switched to digital cameras with its 2005 - 2008 years (Seasons 4 - 6), recording via what I assume was HDCAM; even if the 2005 - 2008 seasons hadn't had serious budget cuts, digital cameras make sense for any TV production due to scheduling and costs. The look of THE DEAD ZONE's SD image doesn't seem that different from previous seasons (outside of production choices where lighting is less layered and intricate with a preference for post production relighting). But when it comes to upscaling, Topaz can't make use of the grain on these DVD files.
The reason: a digital video camera doesn't create an image from grains; it's formed from pixels. The grainy quality on THE DEAD ZONE's Season 4 - 6 episodes has been applied to the image afterwards to mimic the look of film and follow the Season 1 - 3 style. Aesthetically, it's consistent, but that grain isn't image forming, so the AI can't use it to extract greater detail for higher resolutions.
Instead, Topaz treats it this post production grain on THE DEAD ZONE as a compression artifact to be diminished. THE DEAD ZONE in its 16mm episodes could be AI upscaled to look like a crisp 1080p film scan. For the HDCAM seasons of THE DEAD ZONE, the AI upscaling can't extract greater detail from the grain because the grain is just an informationless layer on top. Instead, the AI lifts off the grain, filters out DVD compression artifacts, and does a lossless/gainless increase from 480i to 1080p.
After AI upscaling, DEAD ZONE episodes from the digital years look less like film and more like amazingly well-upscaled DVD; they look very good, but they have a certain fine blur over smaller details because to get here, THE DEAD ZONE in this format went from being an HD digital video to being reduced to SD and then rescaled to HD again. The digital video master, wherever it is, would be in full quality HD and likely looks a bit better than this. Not night and day, but maybe morning and morning after a very large cup of coffee.
Of course, none of this really matters; if Paramount (the rights holders) wanted to release THE DEAD ZONE in HD, they have the high definition videotape masters whereas for SLIDERS, Universal only has standard definition videotape masters.