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#1321 | |
Power Member
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#1322 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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This is interesting, amazing spider-man comparison. Seems there are less fine layers of grain on 4k but it still looks sharper on the "person". Hope they haven't just pumped up the sharpening tools.
http://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/25472 |
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#1323 | |
Banned
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#1324 |
Blu-ray Ninja
Oct 2008
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That's what it looks like to me from the shots I've seen, or maybe a scaling algorithm that produces more sharpness. Of course, without knowing the source of these comparison shots and if they're correct, who knows if what they show has any relationship to reality.
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#1327 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Ouch the sharpness overload....
http://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/25455 http://screenshotcomparison.com/comparison/25453 Seems the main object in the center of the image always get a sharpness boost which makes me think this is a wrong kind of upgrade. Also all fine grain is gone so looks like some sort of DNR. |
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#1328 | |
Banned
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#1330 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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A new batch of 4k movies is on the way on 5 sep in Germany. This is only the new ones:
Pineapple Express (4K Remastered Edition) The art of winning - Moneyball (4K Remastered Edition) Godzilla (4K Remastered Edition) Illuminati (4K Remastered Edition) Men in Black (4K Remastered Edition) Spider-Man 2 (4K Remastered Edition) Godzilla should be fun ![]() |
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#1331 | |
Blu-ray Duke
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#1333 | |
Blu-ray King
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#1336 |
Blu-ray.com Reviewer
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Just a heads up: Amazon.com has had several copies of the "Mastered in 4K" Series on their Amazon wherehouse deals for the past week. I ordered a copy of Spider-Man and Ghostbusters this way, but I just got them today and the discs inside of the cases were the original discs, not the new 4K discs.
I'm not sure if this will be the case for all of the copies being sold on their Wherehouse deals, but I thought I should pass this along in case anyone was considering ordering them that way to save a couple bucks. |
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#1337 | |
Expert Member
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I agree. (Men in Black II could also use an upgrade.) |
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#1338 | |
Senior Member
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Are you sure? I can't speak for SPIDER-MAN, but the GHOSTBUSTERS 4K disc art is identical to the old release. So if you didn't know that, I can see you thinking that it was the old disc. |
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#1339 |
Blu-ray Champion
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![]() Spider-Man (Mastered in 4K on a 1080P Blu-ray disc):Sound and Vision magazine review The following are select word for word quotes from the Sound and Vision magazine review: “Other Blu-rays have been sourced from a 4K master, so what’s the big deal with these? A few things. First, the video bitrate has been upped considerably to ensure a solid, artifact-free picture: The new, Mastered in 4K Spider-Man maintains a steady 35 Mbps, as compared with the high-20 Mbps bitrate typical with other discs, including the 2012 Spider-Man Blu-ray. (Unfortunately, the increased video data rate means there’s no space for extra stuff like features and commentary tracks.) Second, Mastered in 4K discs incorporate something Sony calls Expanded Color, which otherwise goes by the name x.v.Color or xvYCC. To briefly sum up, discs with x.v.Color incorporate data describing colors outside the standard Rec.709 HDTV color space. When a Mastered in 4K disc is played on an x.v.Color-compatible BD player (according to Sony, only its own player line plus the PlayStation 3 can reliably be called compatible) and displayed on a TV capable of x.v.Color reproduction — Sony’s new W900A series HDTVs (look for my review in the June/July/August issue of Sound&Vision) and XBR-X900A Series4K Ultra HD TVs, for example — you get the option to view this expanded range. And displaying it shouldn't involve any shift in the TV’s color points — the disc simply instructs the TV to “retrieve” those extra colors without distorting the set’s overall color balance.” “To judge from this new Sony Pictures Mastered in 4K Spider-Man Blu-ray, a beefed-up bitrate plus expanded color can yield improvements. The downside here is that you can only reap the full benefits of the new discs by viewing them with a Sony player and an x.v.Color-capable, 4K-rez display like the Sony TV I used for my test. Still, after watching this initial release, I'm convinced that “Mastered in 4K” adds up to more than just a Blu-ray-era rehash of the company's Superbit DVDs. (Remember those?)” |
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