We reserve the right to delete or edit any post entirely at our discretion. Links posted in comments may not be displayed. The Doctor Who site welcomes constuctive comments related to the news article in question. Required fields are marked *īy clicking submit you agree to our terms and conditions (below), we reserve the right to edit or delete inappropriate messages. Your email address will not be published. Surely, if they’re upscaling, a more prominent story like the DWM Survey-topping Day Of The Doctor would be more suitable? I just don’t know what to think with this one at all. ![]() I’d guess, therefore, that this is to test the waters for future 4K releases, but that’s a bit odd to me. Without it, this release would essentially be doing what most 4K Blu-ray players/TVs do anyway by upscaling, and so you’re essentially getting the standard Blu-ray release at a premium. Converting 16mm inserts to HD, video to 50/60fps, and having uncompressed multi-channel audio is a good reason for me in the case of Season 19, but in the case of this release, there’s no real reason to pick it up without them confirming HDR. I’m all for pushing new formats, I can’t wait for Season 19’s Blu-ray, for example, but I feel like they need a proper reason for it. Unless they state that this release also has HDR, which would make a difference in the dynamic colour range of the picture, even at a 1080p upscaleĮven as someone that loves and collects 4K movies, this feels a bit pointless of a release, if I’m honest. I would also assume the effects are rendered the same, at 2K. Even though it’s a 4K Blu-ray, it’s stated in the description that it’s an upscale, more than likely from the 2K/1080p master.
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