Skip to main content

LG TVs can automatically kill the soap opera effect for Prime Video content

LG is rolling out an update to the Filmmaker Mode feature on all 2020 and 2021 4K and 8K UHD Smart TVs starting this week. The update will let these TVs respond to a signal embedded in certain streaming shows and movies by automatically switching to Filmmaker Mode. For now, the feature only works with Amazon Prime Video content, but presumably, it could be applied to any streaming content from any service.

For the uninitiated, Filmmaker Mode — the brainchild of the UHD Alliance — is the TV industry’s answer to the growing frustration over what’s commonly known as the “soap opera effect.” Motion-smoothing technologies that are designed to help modern flat-panel displays do a better job with fast-motion video, like sports content, have the unfortunate side effect of making lots of other content (like movies and TV shows) look unnatural and, in many cases, low-budget — thus the soap opera analogy.

Recommended Videos

For some reason, TV makers continue to ship their TVs from the factory with motion-smoothing turned on by default, so Filmmaker Mode was established as a one-button way to turn off all of that extra picture processing, letting you see content the way its creators meant it to be seen.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

LG’s update means that as long as the streaming content contains the relevant signal as a trigger, you don’t even need to reach for the remote at all — the TV will switch modes automatically. There’s always the option to turn motion smoothing back on manually, but I can’t see why you’d ever want to do that. In fact, LG’s automatic system should become standard on all TVs.

Filmmaker Mode is definitely the easiest way to eliminate the soap opera effect, and automatic Filmmaker Mode is even easier, but for those of us with older TVs, these are not the only options. We have a complete guide to disabling the soap opera effect on any TV. If you’ve never modified your TV’s factory settings, it’s worth a few minutes to dig into the menus in order to eliminate any unnecessary motion smoothing.

The new feature will work with streaming content from the built-in Amazon Prime Video app on any 2020 or 2021 LG 4K or 8K TV equipped with webOS 5 or webOS 6. Digital Trends has learned that these TVs will also recognize the same signal from third-party streaming media devices, like an Apple TV 4K, as long as the device (and the app you’re using) are capable of sending such a signal.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen is a contributing editor to Digital Trends' Audio/Video section, where he obsesses over the latest wireless…
Amazon Prime Video is failing with its Thursday Night Football stream
Thursday Night Football on Amazon Prime Video.

October 6 marked the fourth installment of Thursday Night Football this season, and several things are now clear. First, the Colts-Broncos matchup wasn't worth scheduling in the first place, let alone staying up for overtime in a game that didn't see a single touchdown. Hindsight is 20/20 though.

Second — and this is the part that's actually important — Amazon Prime Video still has some serious work to do if it doesn't want to continue to be dog-cussed by a number of customers each week.

Read more
Amazon Prime Video’s Thursday Night Football stream bad for some, again
Dolphins-Bengals on Thursday Night Football.

Three weeks of Thursday Night Football on Amazon Prime Video, and a third week of streaming problems, apparently. The September 29 game, which had the Miami Dolphins at the Cincinnati Bengals, was the third straight to experience any number of problems with the stream itself, according to numerous reports online.

This season is the first in which Amazon is producing the Thursday night broadcast from start to finish and not just distributing it. And just like in Weeks 2 and 3 of the NFL season, the distribution is what had issues. The Prime Video stream would go from an excellent quality to something we can only call "substandard-definition." Everything dropped to a lower resolution, from the game itself to the on-screen graphics and even some of the advertising. And just like in previous weeks, the issues would come and go.

Read more
Thursday Night Football stream struggles continue for Prime Video
amazon prime video thursday night football streaming issues week 3 steelers

Amazon Prime Video execs said this week they were "very hopeful" that Thursday Night Football streaming issues were "going to be less and less a thing." Looks like we'll all have to give it another go for Week 4.

The September 22 game between AFC North rivals Pittsburgh and Cleveland was peppered with continued streaming issues, where the resolution would drop out and pixelate — look bad, in other words — before returning back to normal. Then it would be fine for a while before dropping out again. And the problem wasn't just limited to the game broadcast — ads would look bad, too, which was at least a little ironic given the sheer number of spots for Amazon Web Services.

Read more