Apologies for the lack of clarity above. This is an update, so that my issue is a bit clearer. Apologies, I have spent a few days trying to get this to work, and am new to making DCPs so have little idea what I am doing. I’ve read everything I can possibly find, but essentially, I cannot find a way to create a DCP of my film without creating fuzzy, unclear images.
I am compiling a DCP for a film that features greyscale pointclouds. The film was compiled in Premiere with thousands of individual JPEGS at high resolution. The quality of low-level grays is the most important thing, it’s very detailed. The ProRes 4444 file plays back beautifully!
But - whenever I convert this to DCP in DCP-o-matic, every frame goes blurry and pixellated. There is something that happens in the JPEG2000 conversion that seriously degrades the image quality, and I cannot find a setting that bypasses this. I have tried all of the image compression settings possible, but DCP-o-matic seems to always re-compress the images in a lossy way, even when I use high bitrates (250mb/s).
Here’s an input image from Premiere, to show the detail in the images:
And here is a still from the outputted mx2 file from DCP-o-matic (screenshot from DCP’s mxf file, taken with VLC) at about the same time:
The same thing happens no matter which settings I choose (all color settings; mpeg/image range within ‘range’ menu; any jpeg2000 bandwidth). The pixellation/false color shows up in DCP-o-matic player, too.
I have tried to re-encode the input file in various ways, including exporting the entire film as .tiff stills, and also as .j2c stills from Media Encoder using the j2k plugin (
https://www.fnordware.com/j2k/). But DCP-o-matic seems to *always* recompress my images and fuzz them up. Is there a way to bypass this?
Thank you in advance for your help!
