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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday February 05 2020, @12:09PM   Printer-friendly
from the next-up-the-zapruder-film dept.

Neural Networks Upscale Film from 1896 to 4K, Make It Look Like It Was Shot on a Modern Smartphone:

When watching old film footage that's plagued with excessive amounts of grain, gate weave, soft focus, and a complete lack of color, it's hard to feel connected to the people in the clip, or what's going on. It looks like a movie, and over the years that medium has taught our brains that what they're seeing on screen might not actually be real. By comparison, the experience of watching videos of friends and family captured on your smartphone is completely different thanks to 4K resolutions and high frame-rates. Those clips feel more authentic and while watching them there's more of a connection to the moment, even if you weren't actually there while it was being shot.

[...] L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat doesn't have the same effect on modern audiences, but Denis Shiryaev wondered if it could be made more compelling by using neural network powered algorithms (including Topaz Labs' Gigapixel AI and DAIN) to not only upscale the footage to 4K, but also increase the frame rate to 60 frames per second. You might yell at your parents for using the motion smoothing setting on their fancy new TV, but here the increased frame rate has a dramatic effect on drawing you into the action.

[...] The results are far from perfect; we're hoping Shiryaev applies one of the many deep learning algorithms that can colorize black and white photos to this film as well, but the obvious potential of these tools to enhance historical footage to increase its impact is just as exciting as the potential for it to be misused.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 05 2020, @06:51PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 05 2020, @06:51PM (#954347)

    It's probably not that different than digital remastering but I think when a human actually does more of the work it probably looks better (and takes longer and costs more since you have to pay someone to do it).

    The thing is you can't add quality to a bitmap. You can extrapolate what you think those pixels would be if they did exist in a higher resolution but such extrapolation is going to have differences from what the actual higher quality image would be.