A slightly overprocessed view of Parliament in Ottawa. As with many outdoor HDR shots, the light on the stonework looks articifical, as if it's been rendered.

I like the HDR aesthetic more when used indoors, especially under challenging lighting, although it does add a certain gothic sci-fi feel in this case:

The effect is usually achieved using a DSLR with automatic exposure bracketing, but someone recently posted on the HDR Flickr group about achieving an HDR effect from a single film negative. Several people promptly made fun of him, but the technique makes sense because film has much broader latitude than a CCD sensor. An HDR effect can be achieved by using a film scanner to combine multiple passes of the negative with different exposure curves.
I'm wondering what it would look like to do this on a larger scale by regrading a properly Telecined motion picture scene multiple times and then combining each frame to produce an HDR image. The end result could be quite interesting, not to mention bloody time consuming.