Celebration Of Varisu | 4K HDR DOLBY VISION | Thalapathy Vijay, Rashmika Mandanna | Thaman |TamilHDR |
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Presenting #CelebrationOfVarisu from Thalapathy Vijay’s #Varisu
Song Credits: Song Name: Celebration Of Varisu Artist : Thaman S lyrics - Vivek Choreographer- Shobi Film Credits: Director - Vamshi Paidipally Producer - Raju, Shirish Banner - Sri Venkateswara Creations Co-Producers - Sri Harshith Reddy, Sri Harshitha Composed by Thaman S Star Cast - Vijay, Rashmika Mandanna, R Sarathkumar, Prabhu, Prakash Raj, Shaam, Srikanth, Khushbu, Yogi Babu, Jayasudha, Sangeetha Krish, Samyuktha Shanmughanathan, Nandini Rai, Ganesh Venkatraman, Sriman, VT Ganesan, John Vijay, Bharath Reddy, Sanjana and others. Story, Screenplay - Vamshi Paidipally, Hari & Ahishor Solomon Dialogues, Additional Screenplay: Vivek Lyrics - Vivek Dop – Karthik Palani Editor – Praveen KL Production Design - Sunil Babu & Vaishnavi Reddy VFX - Yugandhar Action - Ram Laxman, Peter Hein & Dhilip Subbarayan Choreographer – Jani Master Costume Designers - Deepali Noor, Akangshee Chopra (Rashmika Mandanna) Co-Director - Rambabu Kongarapi Makeup - P Nagarajan Pro - Riaz K Ahmed Publicity Design - Gopi Prasannaa Stills - D Maneksha Production Controller - Kishore Surapaneni & KTS Swaminathan Executive Producer - B Sreedhar Rao & R Udhayakumar Associate Editor: M Sandeep Associate Cinematographer - Lokesh Ilayaa Second camera operator - N V Reddy Assistant Cinematographers - Sarath Krishna. R, Yadhavan Subramaniam, Thiyagu G, Sandeep Bapatla & Vivian Pullan Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for Copyright Disclaimer under Section 107 of the copyright act 1976, allowance is made for fair use for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. ABOUT HDR DOLBY VISION : Dolby Vision From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search Dolby Vision new stacked (3).png Dolby Vision is a set of technologies developed by Dolby Laboratories for high dynamic range (HDR) video.[1][2][3] It covers content creation, distribution, and playback.[1][4][5][6] It includes dynamic metadata that are used to adjust and optimize each frame of the HDR video to the consumer display's capabilities in a way based on the content creator's intents. Dolby Vision was introduced in 2014,[1][7][8] making it the first available HDR format. HDR10+ is a competitor HDR format that also uses dynamic metadata.[9] Dolby Vision IQ is an update designed to optimize Dolby Vision content according to the ambient light.[10] Dolby Cinema is using Dolby Vision too, though because of the use of 2.6 gamma and thus 48 nits in SDR cinemas, 108 nits used in Dolby Cinema is already HDR.[11] The first open source player to support profile 5 was mpv. Contents 1 Description 2 Technical details 2.1 Metadata 2.2 Profiles 2.3 Dual layer 2.4 File formats 3 License 4 Adoption 4.1 Hardware 4.2 Content distribution 4.3 Software 5 References Description Dolby Vision allows for a maximum resolution of 8k, up to 12-bit color depth, maximum peak brightness of 10,000 nits.[12] However, according to the Dolby Vision white paper, as of 2018 professional reference monitors, such as the Dolby Vision HDR reference monitor, are currently limited to 4,000 nits of peak brightness.[13] Dolby Vision includes the PQ transfer function, a wide-gamut color space (ITU-R Rec. BT.2020 in YCBCR or IPTPQc2), up to 8K resolution, and for some profiles (FEL) up to 12-bit. It can encode mastering display colorimetry information using static metadata (SMPTE ST 2086) and also provide dynamic metadata (SMPTE ST 2094-10, Dolby format) for each scene or frame.[14] This dynamic metadata or Dynamic HDR allows adjusting of brightness and contrast (in reality, the tone curve) on the scene by scene or even frame by frame bases as and when required and adjusts it many times during the video/movie.[citation needed] It is considered to be future-proof.[15] Dolby Vision includes dynamic metadata that are used to adjust the brightness, color and sharpness of each frame of the video to match the display color volume (i.e. the maximum and minimum brightness capability and the color gamut).[16][2][17] It allows for the creative intents to be preserved on all Dolby Vision compatible displays. Dolby Vision and HDR10+ do not use the same dynamic metadata. Technical details The Dolby Vision format is capable of representing videos with a peak brightness up to 10,000 cd/m2 and a color gamut up to Rec. 2020.[17] Current displays cannot reproduce the full Dolby Vision brightness and gamut capability. There are no brightness and color gamut capability requirements for consumer displays. When the consumer display has lower color volume than the mastering display, the content is adjusted to the consumer display capability based on the dynamic metadata. |