Just Passing Through
The Wildcard
I'm a late comer to the hi-def era, and to be honest, I still prefer to watch SD material, especially TV sourced SD material on my old CRT set. I don't particularly want to be switching on the Home Cinema for every disc, especially when the old telly has built in Prologic, and makes 2.0 material sound really good (sub fan, not a lot of 5.1 Japanese audio out there).
But as I have been watching and rewatching anime on DVD over the past few months, I've made sure to watch a couple of episodes scaled up to see how they fare on an HD set. I figured I'd share what I found, categorised as Worse, Same, Better. The TV is a Panasonic 1080p LCD panel, the video source is a Panasonic Blu-ray player.
The first thing I watched was Steamboy, and as I have found for most film material, upscaling is invariably a good thing. Detail levels were enhanced and the film looked stupendous. Better.
Ah My Goddess TV: Flights of Fancy. This is the Region 1 release from Funimation, not the ADV/Manga release available here. And I found really no difference. It looks just the same upscaled as it does native resolution. I did find that I preferred Urd bigger though, so I watched most of this upscaled. Same.
Salaryman Kintaro: From Artsmagic. This was never the best candidate for upscaling, low budget, simple animation, and it shows. The upscaled image brings out the flaws in the animation to a degree that makes it hard to watch. I stuck with SD for this one. Worse.
Dai-Guard, from ADV had much the same story. It's a simple SD native anime, one of the early computer animated ones, and upscaling it emphasises the simplicity of the colour shading and character designs, it looks better on an SD set. Worse.
Master of Martial Hearts: Manga. Having to watch it was bad enough, but it suffers from an unfortunate NTSC-PAL conversion, which looks worse blown up. Much Worse.
Noir: ADV. This benefits from being animated the old fashioned way, ink on acetate, but upscaling it doesn't add much to the experience. On the bright side, it doesn't detract either. It's the same either way, and I get to enjoy the 5.1 audio I watched most of this upscaled. Same.
Negima!: Revelation The first series animated by Xebec. Just like Dai-Guard, its simple and colourful character design and animation doesn't react well to upscaling. This was one show I watched on SD: Worse.
Vampire Knight Guilty: Manga. Kaze's transfers for this show have been NTSC-PAL nightmares. Every pan or scroll or camera movement has been afflicted with horrific judder. The bigger the screen, the worse it looks. Watch this on as small a screen as possible to minimise the effect. Worse.
Darker Than Black: Manga. It's a fine, detailed anime, which you'd think would be prone to displaying aliasing. There is a bit of that, but not enough to really detract. I could watch this either way. Same.
Eureka Seven The Movie. Manga. Fine upscaled. Would have preferred to see the Blu-ray. Better
Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi: ADV. I was looking forward to watching this upscaled. It's a visually imaginative and diverse show, a lot of Gainax love in it. But upscaled was disappointing, it felt that it lacked detail and was prone to jaggies. SD only for me. Worse.
Cromartie High School: ADV. I try watching this show but I fall asleep everytime. I'm guessing the Same.
The Tower of Druaga: MVM. A recent show, Gonzo brilliance. Crunchyroll offering 720p streams. MVM sourcing a native PAL transfer. It should be built for high definition, right? It's just that the character designs are so simplistic, and usually so small in the admittedly fine background, that upscaling just reveals flaws. I could only watch this on SD. Worse.
Gun Sword: MVM. This was better, although the Japanese DTS sound sucked. The animation is good, the character designs are too, and upscaling reveals no flaws. Same.
Negima S2 + OVAs: Manga. Unlike the first series, this show upscales without issues, and given Shaft's animation, and the sheer preponderance of visual gags, I'd say it's worth the upscale. You just have to remember to skip the opening sequence, or else the compression artefacts will turn the screen to smear. Marginally better.
Millennium Actress: Manga. Movie... Better
Excel Saga: ADV. Now this, as an old show on old DVDs I wouldn't have expected to handle an upscale well. Surprisingly it came out without any major issues. It looks just fine on either format. Same.
Tsukihime Lunar Legend: MVM. Another surprise. I guess detail and atmosphere count for a lot. I wound up watching this show exclusively on the HD set, upscaling it really brought out the best in the show. Better.
Guyver: The Bioboosted Armour: Manga. On the other hand, this simplistic and old fashioned anime really does belong in the 20th Century and the smaller screen. Worse
Gunslinger Girl: Il Teatrino: Manga. It's not the most vibrant of animations, and it does have a legacy NTSC-PAL conversion, but I found that upscaling it did it no harm (except the Manga logo on this disc for some reason). I could watch this either way. Same
Urusei Yatsura OVA: MVM An old disc, an older transfer of an even older anime. Small screen is best for this one. Worse
Yugo The Negotiator: ADV See Cromartie High School.
Shikabane Hime: Manga. Now this on the other hand is a Gainax anime that does benefit from the upscale. Enhanced detail, richer colour definition, and given the prevalance of darker scenes, a much better viewing experience over all. Better.
Slayers Try: MVM. Another older series benefits from being a film source. While the upscale doesn't improve the perception of the image, it doesn't harm it either. Same.
Psycho Diver: MVM Not the best video source in the first place, but it doesn't make a lot of difference either. Same.
Cowboy Bebop Remix: Bandai. I started watching this on the big screen to take full advantage of the 5.1 audio, and gradually fell in love with the upscaled image. It's a film source, which helps, but the Bandai discs do have problems with interlacing artefacts that do affect the upscaled image. But on balance it's a better experience. Better.
Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood: Manga. As good upscaled as it is in standard definition. Can watch it either way, although the action does look better on a bigger screen. Same.
Ghost Sweeper Mikami movie: Manga. I never would have expected this to upscale well, especially as it's a letterbox transfer, very low resolution, and getting on in age too. But I guess it's that film source again. It actually looked better on the HD set. I guess the software does a better job of zooming the image than the zoom in my SD set. Better.
Tactics: Manga. Oh dear. Upscaling this introduces all sorts of artefacts and problems. The image becomes artificially soft, edges are blurred, and all sorts of weirdness happens. This is definitely one for the SD set only. Much worse.
Panda Go Panda: Manga. Miyazaki's Panda movie looks good either way: Same.
Texhnolyze: MVM. Now this has been the ultimate surprise for me. Upscaling this show has really enhanced the atmosphere, brought out the richness and detail in the animation that was previously hidden by the SD set. You hear about US companies upscaling SD anime to Blu-ray and that may make you scratch your head. But if one show deserves being released on Blu-ray, it's Texhnolyze. I don't think I'll ever watch this SD again. Much Better.
I'll add more as I watch them.
But as I have been watching and rewatching anime on DVD over the past few months, I've made sure to watch a couple of episodes scaled up to see how they fare on an HD set. I figured I'd share what I found, categorised as Worse, Same, Better. The TV is a Panasonic 1080p LCD panel, the video source is a Panasonic Blu-ray player.
The first thing I watched was Steamboy, and as I have found for most film material, upscaling is invariably a good thing. Detail levels were enhanced and the film looked stupendous. Better.
Ah My Goddess TV: Flights of Fancy. This is the Region 1 release from Funimation, not the ADV/Manga release available here. And I found really no difference. It looks just the same upscaled as it does native resolution. I did find that I preferred Urd bigger though, so I watched most of this upscaled. Same.
Salaryman Kintaro: From Artsmagic. This was never the best candidate for upscaling, low budget, simple animation, and it shows. The upscaled image brings out the flaws in the animation to a degree that makes it hard to watch. I stuck with SD for this one. Worse.
Dai-Guard, from ADV had much the same story. It's a simple SD native anime, one of the early computer animated ones, and upscaling it emphasises the simplicity of the colour shading and character designs, it looks better on an SD set. Worse.
Master of Martial Hearts: Manga. Having to watch it was bad enough, but it suffers from an unfortunate NTSC-PAL conversion, which looks worse blown up. Much Worse.
Noir: ADV. This benefits from being animated the old fashioned way, ink on acetate, but upscaling it doesn't add much to the experience. On the bright side, it doesn't detract either. It's the same either way, and I get to enjoy the 5.1 audio I watched most of this upscaled. Same.
Negima!: Revelation The first series animated by Xebec. Just like Dai-Guard, its simple and colourful character design and animation doesn't react well to upscaling. This was one show I watched on SD: Worse.
Vampire Knight Guilty: Manga. Kaze's transfers for this show have been NTSC-PAL nightmares. Every pan or scroll or camera movement has been afflicted with horrific judder. The bigger the screen, the worse it looks. Watch this on as small a screen as possible to minimise the effect. Worse.
Darker Than Black: Manga. It's a fine, detailed anime, which you'd think would be prone to displaying aliasing. There is a bit of that, but not enough to really detract. I could watch this either way. Same.
Eureka Seven The Movie. Manga. Fine upscaled. Would have preferred to see the Blu-ray. Better
Magical Shopping Arcade Abenobashi: ADV. I was looking forward to watching this upscaled. It's a visually imaginative and diverse show, a lot of Gainax love in it. But upscaled was disappointing, it felt that it lacked detail and was prone to jaggies. SD only for me. Worse.
Cromartie High School: ADV. I try watching this show but I fall asleep everytime. I'm guessing the Same.
The Tower of Druaga: MVM. A recent show, Gonzo brilliance. Crunchyroll offering 720p streams. MVM sourcing a native PAL transfer. It should be built for high definition, right? It's just that the character designs are so simplistic, and usually so small in the admittedly fine background, that upscaling just reveals flaws. I could only watch this on SD. Worse.
Gun Sword: MVM. This was better, although the Japanese DTS sound sucked. The animation is good, the character designs are too, and upscaling reveals no flaws. Same.
Negima S2 + OVAs: Manga. Unlike the first series, this show upscales without issues, and given Shaft's animation, and the sheer preponderance of visual gags, I'd say it's worth the upscale. You just have to remember to skip the opening sequence, or else the compression artefacts will turn the screen to smear. Marginally better.
Millennium Actress: Manga. Movie... Better
Excel Saga: ADV. Now this, as an old show on old DVDs I wouldn't have expected to handle an upscale well. Surprisingly it came out without any major issues. It looks just fine on either format. Same.
Tsukihime Lunar Legend: MVM. Another surprise. I guess detail and atmosphere count for a lot. I wound up watching this show exclusively on the HD set, upscaling it really brought out the best in the show. Better.
Guyver: The Bioboosted Armour: Manga. On the other hand, this simplistic and old fashioned anime really does belong in the 20th Century and the smaller screen. Worse
Gunslinger Girl: Il Teatrino: Manga. It's not the most vibrant of animations, and it does have a legacy NTSC-PAL conversion, but I found that upscaling it did it no harm (except the Manga logo on this disc for some reason). I could watch this either way. Same
Urusei Yatsura OVA: MVM An old disc, an older transfer of an even older anime. Small screen is best for this one. Worse
Yugo The Negotiator: ADV See Cromartie High School.
Shikabane Hime: Manga. Now this on the other hand is a Gainax anime that does benefit from the upscale. Enhanced detail, richer colour definition, and given the prevalance of darker scenes, a much better viewing experience over all. Better.
Slayers Try: MVM. Another older series benefits from being a film source. While the upscale doesn't improve the perception of the image, it doesn't harm it either. Same.
Psycho Diver: MVM Not the best video source in the first place, but it doesn't make a lot of difference either. Same.
Cowboy Bebop Remix: Bandai. I started watching this on the big screen to take full advantage of the 5.1 audio, and gradually fell in love with the upscaled image. It's a film source, which helps, but the Bandai discs do have problems with interlacing artefacts that do affect the upscaled image. But on balance it's a better experience. Better.
Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood: Manga. As good upscaled as it is in standard definition. Can watch it either way, although the action does look better on a bigger screen. Same.
Ghost Sweeper Mikami movie: Manga. I never would have expected this to upscale well, especially as it's a letterbox transfer, very low resolution, and getting on in age too. But I guess it's that film source again. It actually looked better on the HD set. I guess the software does a better job of zooming the image than the zoom in my SD set. Better.
Tactics: Manga. Oh dear. Upscaling this introduces all sorts of artefacts and problems. The image becomes artificially soft, edges are blurred, and all sorts of weirdness happens. This is definitely one for the SD set only. Much worse.
Panda Go Panda: Manga. Miyazaki's Panda movie looks good either way: Same.
Texhnolyze: MVM. Now this has been the ultimate surprise for me. Upscaling this show has really enhanced the atmosphere, brought out the richness and detail in the animation that was previously hidden by the SD set. You hear about US companies upscaling SD anime to Blu-ray and that may make you scratch your head. But if one show deserves being released on Blu-ray, it's Texhnolyze. I don't think I'll ever watch this SD again. Much Better.
I'll add more as I watch them.