As an Amazon associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Thanks for your support!                               
×

Best DVD Deals


Best DVD Deals, See All the Deals »
Top deals | New deals  
 All countries United States United Kingdom Canada Germany France Spain Italy Australia Netherlands Japan Mexico
Harry Potter: The Complete 8-Film Collection (DVD)
$21.49
 
Universal Classic Monsters: The Complete 30-Film Collection (DVD)
$41.99
 
The Magicians: The Complete Series (DVD)
$21.99
 
Killjoys: The Complete Series (DVD)
$24.99
 
Wonder Woman: The Complete Collection (DVD)
$24.99
57 min ago
Without a Trace: The Complete Fourth Season (DVD)
$15.00
3 hrs ago
Superman (DVD)
$19.95
 
Beetlejuice: The Complete Series (DVD)
$15.49
 
Scooby-Doo 10-Film Collection (DVD)
$14.99
 
Pokémon: DP Sinnoh League Victors - The Complete Season (DVD)
$18.29
17 min ago
Chucky: The Complete 7-Movie Collection (DVD)
$15.49
 
Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends: The Complete Series (DVD)
$33.99
 
What's your next favorite movie?
Join our movie community to find out


Image from: Life of Pi (2012)

Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > DVD Movies
Register FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 06-27-2019, 09:20 AM   #1
voltz voltz is offline
Expert Member
 
voltz's Avatar
 
Dec 2012
Default What movies have had better conversions on DVD then Blu-Ray?

I think I want to take a shot at Mortal Kombat Annihilation to start off. The double side DVD has a print that is closer to a realistic color tone, while the blu looks like they went and over-enhanced it. This is specifically why I keep the copy around so I can view that on small occasions.

Matrix as well for the lack of green.
  Reply With Quote
Old 06-27-2019, 10:03 AM   #2
BladeRunner2007 BladeRunner2007 is online now
Blu-ray Count
 
BladeRunner2007's Avatar
 
Oct 2009
Germany
58
1031
3
Default

If we are talking about color timing I agree with The Matrix. I'd also add The Road Warrior to this list: the much warmer, brown-orange-ish color timing fits the movie much better than the bleak, cold, desaturated colors present on the blu-ray.
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
karsten (02-19-2020)
Old 07-20-2019, 01:16 PM   #3
lostdistance lostdistance is offline
Member
 
Jun 2018
Default

The Spanish - and AFAIK only - Blu-ray release of Intermezzo (1936) is inferior to the Swedish DVD release.

The Blu-ray is encoded with MPEG-2 MP@HL, 1080i@50Hz. Compared to the DVD, the Blu-ray exhibits edge cropping and increased contrast which loses shadow detail.
  Reply With Quote
Old 07-20-2019, 01:49 PM   #4
gaastra gaastra is offline
Expert Member
 
Sep 2015
4
167
1060
201
112
Default

The first for the love of Benji Blu-ray was awful. Got it for my niece to watch and it has worse picture then the vhs release!

It has a new release so i hope they fixed it but stay clear of that first release!
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-18-2020, 02:37 AM   #5
karsten karsten is offline
Senior Member
 
Jan 2020
Default

-Bram Stoker's Dracula. I far prefer the more natural Superbit colors to those of the blu-ray that I bought (which was the first one that was released). I haven't obtained the 4k, so I don't know how that one compares, color-wise, but the caps-a-holic caps suggest that it could be even worse.

-V: The Original Miniseries. Preferred colors again.

-Fantasia (1940). The blu-ray is so drastically recolored and brightened from its DVD and LD issues that it looks like an altogether different movie, and loses a lot of its magic.

-Fellowship of the Ring: Extended Edition. The blu-ray is soaked in a heavily greenish digital tint that many viewers have complained about.

-Star Wars II: Attack of the Clones. The blu-ray has been slathered with a teal filter. Ugh.

-Krull. The DVD has natural, appealing colors. On the blu-ray, although the resolution and PQ is far superior, the colors are garish -- as if the film had been remade shot for shot with a modern video camera, and the saturation turned WAY up. Trying to get the blu-ray to look natural is almost impossible. One needs to turn up the blue to take out the sallow yellow coat, adjust the tint to keep the skin tones from becomes beet red as a result, and turn the saturation way, WAY down, and still it never looks right. Plus, the DVD appears to have post-production sky filtering that the blu-ray removed -- again, leading to that artificial, home-video look.

-Crocodile Dundee. Typical blu-ray color issue: teals and greens pushed up, blues and pinks pushed down, blue skies look teal, clear skies look sallow, and moonlight isn't blue but green. The DVD colors, by contrast, are all natural and true.



There are also a host of films that I'm considering not upgrading to blu-ray from DVD at all (Road Warrior being one of them), out of color-tampering concerns, based on caps I've seen online. A consistent problem seems to be huge injections of teal, or pea-green, or sallow yellow, or some combination of all three.


EDIT TO ADD:

How could I forget the granddaddy of them all?

-Star Wars IV-VI. The unaltered, original trilogy has only ever been released on DVD, never (yet) on blu-ray. The blu-rays versions are worse in all sorts of ways, beyond color changes.

Last edited by karsten; 02-28-2020 at 01:28 AM.
  Reply With Quote
Old 02-18-2020, 02:59 AM   #6
Jay H. Jay H. is offline
Blu-ray Baron
 
Jay H.'s Avatar
 
Oct 2019
2
Default

The Shield (TV series)
V (TV mini-series)
Orgazmo
  Reply With Quote
Thanks given by:
karsten (02-19-2020)
Reply
Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > DVD Movies



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 11:39 AM.