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Sony Bravia KDL-46XBR4 LCD Digital Color TV:
Not all viewers are fans of such high frame-rate presentation of filmed images. Some feel that it makes a 24 frame-per-second film source look more like 60fps video. They value the "look and feel" of film and object to anything that might alter it. But I'm not one of them. Yes, I did seeperhaps I was imagininga subtle smoothing out of all motion, even that which presented no particular challenge. This did subtly shift the appearance of the filmed images in a video-like direction. But the result was, for me, still far from the appearance of video-originated material. It was still clearly film. A film-based source remains 24fps, and nothing in the conversion to 120Hz can change that.
At angles up to about 45-degrees off center, the XBR4 exhibited no significant change in color, brightness, or contrast. There were subtle changes beyond that point, but the image remained highly watchable as far off axis as anyone is likely to sit and still be able to comfortably view the picture. I did see some occasional posterization, but mostly in cable sources where it was not possible to specifically blame the Sony. And I saw no obvious color shifts on black and white filmthe source most revealing tests of color impurities. But the Sony's deinterlacing and scaling performance, with a 480i input, was disappointing. It performed poorly on many of the difficult video processing torture tests on the HQV Benchmark DVD (with the set's CineMotion set to either Auto1 or Auto2). But it did pass the Coliseum flyover test in chapter 12 of Gladiator. Overall, however, the video processing in Sony's own VPL-AW15 LCD projector, reviewed here recently, performed far better. So do many upconverting DVD players. Sony's processing performed much better, however, when converting 1080i sources to the set's 1080p resolution. It still did not recognize and deal with 3/2 pulldown, but it did perform the deinterlacing properly and only rarely showed video processing artifacts with a 1080i or 720p source. And these were minor and fleeting. This is an important point, as I did most of my watching of the XBR4 as you are likely to: either with native 720p, 1080i, or 1080p sources or with standard definition sources upconverted to those resolutions by a cable box or DVD, HD DVD, or Blu-ray player. I never had a serious need to input 480i or 480p. Back on the upside, the Sony's black level and shadow detail were impressivethe best I've yet seen from an LCD. The occasional gray haze I noted on dark scenes in last year's XBR2s was rare, and then only on the darkest, lowest contrast scenes. There is still plenty of room for improvement, of course. The ideal (well, my ideal, at least) is the ability of a totally black screen image to meld so seamlessly into a set's black bezel in a darkened room that you can't tell if the set is on or off. But of the commercially available flat panel sets I've seenLCD or plasmaonly the new Pioneer plasmas, and to a lesser extent the latest Panasonic plasmas, approach this ideal, and none has yet reached it. There is, however, a bit of an odd quirk in the way the Sony's excellent blacks are produced. If you switch from a bright test pattern to a very dark one, or a completely dark screen image, the blacks are, initially, very good. They're deeper by measurement, in fact, than you'll see from most flat panel displays. But a few seconds later they suddenly, and abruptly, get significantly darker. I have no explanation for this, but the shift was never visible with real program material in the nearly four weeks I lived with and watched this set. And it has been a fun four weeks. I could live happily with the XBR4 over the long haul. Apart from its disappointing scaling of standard definition sources, which as noted above can be worked around without much difficulty (but shouldn't have to be), it won me over in its well engineered balance of strengths: fine resolution with a canny juggling of smoothness and natural detail, outstanding color, a great assortment of useful (and yes, some not so useful) controls, and blacks that are approach the best I've seen in a flat panel display. Space Cowboys isn't an unusually good-looking Blu-ray discin its first half. This is likely due to the photography itself, because the second half, in space, is breathtaking. It's a mixture of light and dark scenes, with a wealth of shadow detail, high contrast shots, and vivid star fields. The Sony did a fine job with all of this. The star fields did fade a bit when accompanied by very bright shots in the foreground, but most of the time they were totally convincing. I know that computer animation can look good on most displays, but it can still be useful when judging detail and the richness (but not accuracy) of a set's color reproduction. There are better animated films than The Wild (Blu-ray), but none that look better. It's an exceptional disc, and the detail brought out by the Sonyparticularly in the animal furis amazing. The colors are also vivid and bright, but never over-the-top. I could actually sit less than four feet from the Sony with this and other good high-definition material and get an amazingly crisp image with no obvious screen door effectat one time the bane of LCD displays. With 1920 x 1080 resolution on a 46" screen, the pixels are just too small to distinguish from that distance. I didn't sit that close normally, of course, nor could I sit that close with standard definition material. Good DVDs looked fine on the Sony, however, at a more practical viewing distance. You could easily see the soft edges on Gladiator, from any distance, but from eight feet or so it produced a solidly enjoyable image. In fact, even the recent, standard definition documentary series The Universe, upconverted to 1080i by my cable box, was highly watchable. But HD does spoil you for anything less. I've mentioned the exceptional video quality of the Fox series House before, but is continues to amaze me, even in reruns. The subtlety of its cinematography is striking on the Sony, and even more glaring in comparison to the show's torch-lit ads (BRIGHT appears to be the new LOUD when it comes to commercial breaks). The detail on the show is also striking, but not in an obvious way. In one scene from a recent episode there's a hospital directory on a wall next to an elevator. It lists the departments on each floor. I freeze-framed the image (it was on my HD PVR) and measured the letters; on the screen they were 3/16th of an inch high. I could easily read them from nearly 10 feet away. And some folks are still arguing that 1080por even high definition, results in no visible improvements in a relatively small screen at normal home viewing distances! I was also able to compare the Sony side-by-side with the Samsung LN-T5265F, recently reviewed. The Samsung's larger 52" screen was a little more immersive, and its resolution was, subjectively, just as impressive as the Sony's. But the XBR4's deeper, richer blacks gave its picture greater depth and punch.
Conclusion As for more screen area, if you need it there's always the 52" KDL-52XBR4. We haven't tested that one, but 46" isn't exactly tiny. And if you're moving up from a CRT set the KDL-46XBR4 will look positively huge. It will also look great. Highly recommended.
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