Movie:
Inception (2010)
IMDB: tt1375666
Rating: 8.8/10 (2,100,000 votes)
Video: 1920x800 10 bit AV1
Duration: 02:28:08
Size: 2989MB
Settings: VMAF Target 97.5, cpu-used 4
VMAF mean ?, 25% ?
--------------------------------
Audio: Opus stereo
Languages: English, Mandarin, Hindi, Spanish, French
Russian, Portugese, Telugu, Tamil
Subtitles: English, Chinese Simplified*, Spanish
Arabic*, French, Russian*, Portugese, English*
*SRT
--------------------------------
Encoded by: ranma
Group: AV1D
--------------------------------
Encoder: aomenc
Version: 3.0.0-202
--------------------------------
Tools: Av1an
eac3to
MKVToolNix
--------------------------------
The Movie:
A thief who steals corporate secrets through the use of
dream-sharing technology is given the inverse task of
planting an idea into the mind of a C.E.O.
Director: Christopher Nolan
Writer: Christopher Nolan
Stars: Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Elliot Page
Encoder Note:
Because the audio covers so many languages, I did something
I don't normally do as I can't QC other languages and that
is to include crowdsourced SRT subtitles. Apologies for
any typos/mistranslations.
About:
AV1 is a modern free format providing amazing quality
at lower bitrates than h.264/265.
For improving AV1 playback use the mpv video player and follow this guide:
[til we can get a guide setup here, just google "drastically improving av1 playback"
which should be a post on the r/AV1 subreddit]
If you still can't get it to play, try using VLC and a mid
to high end Android/iDevice from 2016 or beyond. And even
Chrome can play it if you rename the .mkv to .webm!
--------------------------------
Lastly: As an attempt to spread and hopefully popularize AV1,
here's my encode command for this encode:
python av1an.py -i input -v " --cpu-used=4 --end-usage=q --cq-level=20 --bit-depth=10 " -a " -an " -p 2 -s scenes.csv -log log --vmaf --vmaf_path "vmaf_v0.6.1.pkl" -ff " -vf crop=1920:800:0:140 " --vmaf_filter "crop=1920:800:0:140" --target_quality 97.5 -o output --chunk_method vs_lsmash --min_q 16 --max_q 29
Encoder's note 2: This was encoded before I discovered
--probe_rate so disregard the stupidly low --max_q of 29
Screenshots