Re: Criterion on Hulu
Posted: Sat Jan 14, 2012 5:18 am
Look on website under recently added or on my roku in hulu under movies, go to studios --> criterion --> recently added
If Hulu operates like Netflix streaming, the image quality will be automatically reduced if the server detects that the connection is too busy to accept the data for a higher quality image. Often, watching streaming films at non-peak viewing times will result in a better, more consistent picture quality. This is the dilemma of film rental companies going to streaming exclusively; the more people streaming material on-line, the lower the image quality for all.swo17 wrote:Do I have to change a setting somewhere to tell it not to compress as much? I have a fast cable connection and set the resolution to HD before viewing.
Basically the most terrifying sentence a cinephile could ever expect to read. How do we lobby these companies to give us high-quality alternatives before the ship sails?Roger Ryan wrote:This is the dilemma of film rental companies going to streaming exclusively; the more people streaming material on-line, the lower the image quality for all.
i don't even try to watch anything via netflix streaming on Friday or Saturday nights anymore. It's definitely a problem they don't seem able to rectify.Roger Ryan wrote:If Hulu operates like Netflix streaming, the image quality will be automatically reduced if the server detects that the connection is too busy to accept the data for a higher quality image. Often, watching streaming films at non-peak viewing times will result in a better, more consistent picture quality. This is the dilemma of film rental companies going to streaming exclusively; the more people streaming material on-line, the lower the image quality for all.swo17 wrote:Do I have to change a setting somewhere to tell it not to compress as much? I have a fast cable connection and set the resolution to HD before viewing.

Not sure if Hulu is the same, but with Netflix streaming you can surmise how good the image will be based on how fast the dark blue progress bar line travels across the screen during the "Testing Connection Speed" phase. If this completes within two seconds, you're getting the highest quality. The longer it takes to cross the screen, the less data the server will send to support the film which means the image quality will decrease to compensate. The problem I run into is that the "test" goes through at the highest speed, but the pipeline gets clogged with users 15 minutes later and the film will keep stopping to rebuffer every minute or so. At this point, I'll exit Netflix and go back in hoping the "test" will take a bit longer so I know the film will continue unimpeded even if the picture quality is degraded. If you're lucky, you hit a happy medium where the film will continue to play with a fairly high-quality image.swo17 wrote:FWIW, I was watching on a Saturday morning. But if the only way for me to ensure that I'm seeing a stream with the highest possible PQ is for me to intuit that the rest of the world is taking a breather at the moment.
There are two things in play here I think. Coming from a video background, my guess is that Criterion has to rip these files into Adobe or Final Cut Pro to compress them in order to get a small enough file to be able to stream online. Then it gets rendered into 720p. So it could be something to do with the way the file was encoded that is causing you some picture problems. If that's the case then there is nothing you can do about it. For me, I noticed "Branded to Kill" was a mess no matter where I watched it, whether on a mobile device via 3g or my computer or on my flatscreen via my PS3, nothing worked. The picture was all pixelated and choppy and there was a lot of artifacts everywhere.swo17 wrote:Do I have to change a setting somewhere to tell it not to compress as much? I have a fast cable connection and set the resolution to HD before viewing.
Assuming this is accurate, I think it'd be helpful if current Hulu adventurers could note any titles that fall into this category in this thread.yeahimajerk wrote:I have noticed that some of encoding they've done to some titles is just not good and no matter what speed you are watching it at, you are going to notice compression on the screen.
I'm curious about this as well. I signed up last week and watched Weekend streaming via PS3. On a 100" screen it was comparable to DVD quality. I didnt have any problems with macroblocking, but did have one stutter about 15 minutes in.Perkins Cobb wrote:Assuming this is accurate, I think it'd be helpful if current Hulu adventurers could note any titles that fall into this category in this thread.yeahimajerk wrote:I have noticed that some of encoding they've done to some titles is just not good and no matter what speed you are watching it at, you are going to notice compression on the screen.
I nominate "Branded to Kill" then. Unless it was something with my internet connection or my setup that day, it was a compressed, choppy, artifacted mess.Perkins Cobb wrote: Assuming this is accurate, I think it'd be helpful if current Hulu adventurers could note any titles that fall into this category in this thread.
Heh. When I'm sitting at my desk, hiding from my boss, avoiding work, utilizing my 3g connection and the Hulu+ app for my iPhone and I have 1 1/2 hours to kill!swo17 wrote:And yet the Blu-ray of BTK sports one of the most marvelous B&W transfers currently in the collection. Why would someone want to watch it any other way?
I watch Hulu+ through a ROKU and, as a rule, the titles that are streaming in HD look lovely, but the SD titles are definitely a mixed bag. Branded to Kill in SD was indeed very choppy, but Tokyo Drifter in HD looked great. The 1.33:1 titles tend to hold up better streaming in SD.Perkins Cobb wrote:Assuming this is accurate, I think it'd be helpful if current Hulu adventurers could note any titles that fall into this category in this thread.