it depends on what the project was captured on originally as well as how many effects and other assets you've added. Ten minutes of standard definition video will be much smaller than, say, prores444.
Way less than 1. In a 2 hour movie there are only 4 gigs.
A CD track in uncompresed audio (WAV or PCM format) uses 11.0 MB per minute, which is 0.011 GB per minute.
A 4K movie can range from 50 to 100 gigabytes in size, depending on the length and quality of the movie.
5 GB
GB? You mean gay boys? OVER 9000
YouTube videos come in different qualities. The amount of space those movies take will depend quite a lot on the quality. In any case, it will be at most several MB, not GB, per minute.
gigabytes is actually a measurement of memory. If your computer has 100 Gigabytes that's pretty good. A minute is, as I'm sure you know, a measurement of time. So they are incompatible.
That really depends on the quality of the video. A low-quality video may use 1 megabyte (not gigabyte) per minute, or a few megabytes per minute. A DVD, which is already high quality, has 4.7 gigabytes for a capacity of perhaps a little over 2 hours (120 minutes). A Blu-ray disc, which has a still higher quality, uses about 25 gigabytes for the same playing time.
you can watch Japanese movie on TV.
Well, one gigabyte is equal to 1,024 megabytes, so this particular movie would leave you with 19 gigabytes and 322 megabytes.
200 - 250 per gigabyte. One minute of song is approximately 1,000 kilobytes. i dont know ? :|
None. MP3 is an audio format and hence not really suited for movies. If you're talking about MP4, however, it depends, since the bit rate is not a fixed part of the format, but variable. But, typically, it will be about 700MB for 'acceptable' quality on a 90 minute movie, though this depends on your personal threshold for video artifacts.