UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading [Archive]

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Finch
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#176 Post by Finch »

I'm annoyed that the black and white cut of Fury Road is not getting upscaled to 4k especially when Miller says it's his preferred cut of the film. I thought the films were already being released individually? If not, I can wait. I can only take so much Mel Gibson and I only want Road Warrior out of the original three.

PS.: Amended OP to quote the entire set as a reference title.
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Finch
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#177 Post by Finch »

Severin's Santa Sangre UHD added as a reference title.
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bad future
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#178 Post by bad future »

jegharfangetmigenmyg wrote: Sat Nov 13, 2021 9:33 pm It should be noted that for now it's released only as part of the boxed Mad Max Anthology set which contains the original Mad Max Trilogy and the reboot, Fury Road.
Maybe I've misunderstood, but if you're talking about Mad Max 2 / The Road Warrior, that film is indeed being released as a standalone UHD at the same time as the anthology. So is Beyond Thunderdome.
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jegharfangetmigenmyg
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#179 Post by jegharfangetmigenmyg »

bad future wrote: Mon Nov 15, 2021 8:34 am
jegharfangetmigenmyg wrote: Sat Nov 13, 2021 9:33 pm It should be noted that for now it's released only as part of the boxed Mad Max Anthology set which contains the original Mad Max Trilogy and the reboot, Fury Road.
Maybe I've misunderstood, but if you're talking about Mad Max 2 / The Road Warrior, that film is indeed being released as a standalone UHD at the same time as the anthology. So is Beyond Thunderdome.
You're right! I had only seen news on the anthology boxed set. Nice move from Warner as many buyers already own Mad Max 1 and Fury Road... We'll let Finch decide, but maybe the titles should be added individually.
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Finch
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#180 Post by Finch »

I'll leave it as the box set even if Fury Road doesn't represent the same upgrade as the original three.

In other news, Geoff D was very impressed with the 4k stream of Who Framed Roger Rabbit? so that's quite likely another reference title coming so long as Disney don't muck up the encode.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#181 Post by swo17 »

Curious why I can't find the Roger Rabbit UHD on Amazon
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Matt
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#182 Post by Matt »

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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#183 Post by swo17 »

That's just the link to stream or download it though, right? The physical UHD comes out in three weeks. You can pre-order it at Best Buy, Target, and Walmart, but not Amazon as far as I can tell
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#184 Post by Matt »

Sorry, misunderstood the context. It’s probably something to do with Amazon and Disney’s long-standing feud. Amazon often doesn’t list pre-orders of Disney releases to…teach them some kind of lesson?
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#185 Post by swo17 »

Ah, that makes sense, thanks
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bad future
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#186 Post by bad future »

Should be noted that the new Road Warrior UHD has used mixdowns of the new, aggressively "modernized" Dolby Atmos track for the English 5.1 and 2.0. This is unfortunate because the new mix uses a lot of revisionist foley sounds, including apparently adding new sounds where there previously were none, so there's no option to watch the film in English with the original sounds intact. Curiously the the 2.0 track is actually labeled "Original Theatrical English" in the menu, so I assume they did intend to include the original audio and there was a mistake somewhere later in the production chain. According to this post from "the digital bits," Warner is looking into the issue, so hopefully they consider a replacement program or something.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#187 Post by EddieLarkin »

swo17 wrote: Sat Oct 02, 2021 7:34 pm Thanks for that perspective, I wasn't aware of the possibility that the Kino might end up superior
This was regarding Mad Max, and it does indeed appear the Kino remains the best disc as despite them using the same master the WB is missing the original mono.

Beyond Thunderdome is apparently all good so hopefully they will indeed do a replacement disc for Road Warrior.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#188 Post by captveg »

EddieLarkin wrote: Wed Nov 17, 2021 8:28 pm
swo17 wrote: Sat Oct 02, 2021 7:34 pm Thanks for that perspective, I wasn't aware of the possibility that the Kino might end up superior
This was regarding Mad Max, and it does indeed appear the Kino remains the best disc as despite them using the same master the WB is missing the original mono.
The WB disc of Mad Max (1979) has the original AUS mono. What is doesn't have that the Kino UHD has is DolbyVision (WB disc is only HDR10), the special features on the Kino release, or the US dub. So overall, yes, the Kino is the way to go for the first film, but both the Kino and the WB have the original AUS mono track.

It's Mad Max 2 / The Road Warrior (1981) that has the incorrect downmix labeled as the original mono; clearly they intended to include the original mono but whichever vender they use for audio provided the incorrect file.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#189 Post by EddieLarkin »

Yes sorry, that's been cleared up in the BR.com thread now.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#190 Post by denti alligator »

Ghostbusters is not on either list? Is there a consensus on this title?
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#191 Post by mfunk9786 »

From what I understand, it's pretty much just an upscaling of the 4K master done for the last Blu-ray. It's pretty good, but nothing spectacular, and the film has a naturally grainy look that is largely retained and misunderstood by some to be compression artifacts of some kind (but of course, it isn't)
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#192 Post by Finch »

Since the Mad Max titles are of inconsistent quality as of right now, I've reinserted Kino's Mad Max BD as a reference title and added it also to the "Superior Import/Versions" column, and moved Warner's set to the Solid Upgrade column. Beyond Thunderdome doesn't appear to have any issues so it's joining Kino's BD of the first film in the Reference quality tier. Hopefully Warner will fix the audio on Road Warrior so we can add a second pressing to the top column. Fury Road got an individual entry in the second tier.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#193 Post by cdnchris »


captveg wrote: The WB disc of Mad Max (1979) has the original AUS mono. What is doesn't have that the Kino UHD has is DolbyVision (WB disc is only HDR10), the special features on the Kino release.
I'm sure this is explained elsewhere and I didn't see it, but even though the disc "art' for Mad Max in the Warner set indicates Dolby Vision, it's actually HDR10?
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#194 Post by EddieLarkin »

mfunk9786 wrote: Wed Nov 17, 2021 11:57 pm From what I understand, it's pretty much just an upscaling of the 4K master done for the last Blu-ray. It's pretty good, but nothing spectacular, and the film has a naturally grainy look that is largely retained and misunderstood by some to be compression artifacts of some kind (but of course, it isn't)
It's a native 4K master, so there would be no upscaling being done. Certainly they did not take the 1080p file used for the Blu-ray and upscale it to 2160p, if that's what you mean. They will have used the same 4K master for both, so it's the Blu-ray that's a "downscale". And I would say the master is quite spectacular, as basically everything from Sony is, the only problem with it is Sony's approach to HDR. They push things so bright that on grainy films like this the grain becomes very pervasive (though it's not exactly a bad thing if you have a fetish for grain, like so many of us do). Something like the Panasonic Optimiser helps tame things at least, and they are in fact re-releasing the UHD with Dolby Vision soon, that will do the same.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#195 Post by jegharfangetmigenmyg »

EddieLarkin wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 9:19 am
mfunk9786 wrote: Wed Nov 17, 2021 11:57 pm From what I understand, it's pretty much just an upscaling of the 4K master done for the last Blu-ray. It's pretty good, but nothing spectacular, and the film has a naturally grainy look that is largely retained and misunderstood by some to be compression artifacts of some kind (but of course, it isn't)
It's a native 4K master, so there would be no upscaling being done. Certainly they did not take the 1080p file used for the Blu-ray and upscale it to 2160p, if that's what you mean. They will have used the same 4K master for both, so it's the Blu-ray that's a "downscale". And I would say the master is quite spectacular, as basically everything from Sony is, the only problem with it is Sony's approach to HDR. They push things so bright that on grainy films like this the grain becomes very pervasive (though it's not exactly a bad thing if you have a fetish for grain, like so many of us do). Something like the Panasonic Optimiser helps tame things at least, and they are in fact re-releasing the UHD with Dolby Vision soon, that will do the same.
The most extreme example I have experienced is their Close Encounters of the Third Kind UHD. I am a grain fetishist but that release is just over the top, and some of the darker scenes feel boosted / too light. For instance, check out the scenes with Truffaut's cameo. In them the grain almost feels like noise.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#196 Post by clownmeat »

jegharfangetmigenmyg wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 1:28 pm The most extreme example I have experienced is their Close Encounters of the Third Kind UHD. I am a grain fetishist but that release is just over the top, and some of the darker scenes feel boosted / too light. For instance, check out the scenes with Truffaut's cameo. In them the grain almost feels like noise.
In Close Encounters of the Third Kind's case, if memory serves Vilmos Zsigmond deliberately underexposed and pushed the film stock in processing; I'm not sure if it was because of shooting Kodak 5247 in low-light conditions, or if it was to better match FX photography. Whatever the reason, the grain inherent in Close Encounters is even more pronounced than in other '70s movies, so I don't know if there's an easy way to reduce it without compromising the image.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#197 Post by captveg »

cdnchris wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 1:01 am
captveg wrote: The WB disc of Mad Max (1979) has the original AUS mono. What is doesn't have that the Kino UHD has is DolbyVision (WB disc is only HDR10), the special features on the Kino release.
I'm sure this is explained elsewhere and I didn't see it, but even though the disc "art' for Mad Max in the Warner set indicates Dolby Vision, it's actually HDR10?
Yes. It's just HDR10.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#198 Post by Stefan Andersson »

Anatomy of a Murder and Taxi Driver have been upgraded/restored in the 2nd UHD Columbia Classics box.

For Anatomy of a Murder, ten lab/dupe shots in the previous restoration (Criterion master) have been replaced with "a third gen but extremely high quality neg which yielded clean optical shots which now seamlessly meet the rest of the print’s image quality for grain, grayscale and density."

For Taxi Driver Sony used discovered "multi track stems of Herrmann’s score for which they’ve added a five channel Dolby track with the score isolated on the rear channels. /.../ They also preserve the original legacy mono track."

Source: http://filmalert101.blogspot.com/ - Nov. 16, 2021 post.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#199 Post by Finch »

Road Warrior is getting a replacement disc.
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Re: UHD Titles Worth/Not Worth Upgrading

#200 Post by jegharfangetmigenmyg »

Admitting that I don't know the full story -- and maybe this is the wrong thread -- but I find it interesting that for their Kubrick UHD releases Warner opted for the compromised standard 16:9 tv aspect ratio of 1.78:1 for both The Shining and Full Metal Jacket, even though they have certainly never been projected cinematically in this format. As far as I know, Kubrick shot all of his films in 1.33:1 open matte for tv screening (and to prevent cropping) ever since 2001 was cropped on home television screens back in the day. The film were then masked in cinemas to either 1.66:1 in Europe or 1.85:1 in the US, but certainly never 1.78:1. I still have the original Warner dvd's which were released in 1.33:1 when Kubrick was still alive, but that didn't make sense to me, either, since they were never shown in 1.33:1 cinematically. So, I guess that Warner thought that if Kubrick insisted on his films being released in the tv format most widely used back then (fullscreen), then he would also prefer that today, had he still been alive? Anyways, where this stops making sense for me is with the recently released Clockwork Orange UHD. It is in 1.66:1! Why not 1.78:1 like FMJ and TS? Wasn't it projected in 1.85:1 in the US in the 70'ies? And then there's the whole Eyes Wide Shut AR debacle... Will be interesting to see which ratio Warner opt for on the UHD release on that film (maybe next year's Kubrick UHD release?)

clownmeat wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 5:11 pm
jegharfangetmigenmyg wrote: Thu Nov 18, 2021 1:28 pm The most extreme example I have experienced is their Close Encounters of the Third Kind UHD. I am a grain fetishist but that release is just over the top, and some of the darker scenes feel boosted / too light. For instance, check out the scenes with Truffaut's cameo. In them the grain almost feels like noise.
In Close Encounters of the Third Kind's case, if memory serves Vilmos Zsigmond deliberately underexposed and pushed the film stock in processing; I'm not sure if it was because of shooting Kodak 5247 in low-light conditions, or if it was to better match FX photography. Whatever the reason, the grain inherent in Close Encounters is even more pronounced than in other '70s movies, so I don't know if there's an easy way to reduce it without compromising the image.
Makes sense. Zsigmund often experimented with film stock, especially the Altmans he worked on; McCabe & Mrs. Miller probably being the most famous example. Intriguing and interesting, though, that he also did it /were allowed (by Spielberg, no?) to do it on a big budget film like Close Encounters, and without the studio bosses interfering. Those were the 70'ies, I guess.
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