favorite movie of all time but really don't like this 4K disc. I think it's a victim to being early-ish in 4K HDR physical home media releases. Or at least that's what I've heard. Really not a fan of how pink it is compared to the blu-ray and I think if they re-released a 4K copy with a new grade some of these issues would be fixed. Here's to hoping lol
@@martinddhyj - Not the theatrical screenings I attended. Not that it matters. Why does a film transferred to physical media need to slavishly adhere to a theater print/digital file?
The HDR version sparks several concerns, particularly with its luminance values, which require screens to make adjustments using different tone-mapping algorithms. Furthermore, the Blu-ray (SDR) version differs from the SDR-100 nits trim-pass of the Dolby Vision distribution on iTunes, making it challenging to determine which version is more authentic.
@@martinddhyj - No, you don't remember the color grading of the theatrical screening. Because no one can remember that accurately. And why should the transfer be "accurate" to said theatrical screening in the first place?
@@martinddhyj Multiple color grades can exist for the same film. Dolby Vision Cinema, for instance, aims for a peak brightness of 108 nits in its HDR content. You can't really talk about a lack of accuracy. It's just that the targets (home vs cinema) are different. One aspect that everyone can agree on is that this title would have greatly benefited from dynamic metadata.
✅ Complete Review (🇫🇷) : www.hdnumerique.com/dossiers/1244-test-4k-ultra-hd-blu-ray-fury-road.html
🎧 07:05 - Binaural Audio Examples
favorite movie of all time but really don't like this 4K disc. I think it's a victim to being early-ish in 4K HDR physical home media releases. Or at least that's what I've heard. Really not a fan of how pink it is compared to the blu-ray and I think if they re-released a 4K copy with a new grade some of these issues would be fixed. Here's to hoping lol
The theatrical screenings looked like the SDR Blu-ray.
@@martinddhyj - Not the theatrical screenings I attended. Not that it matters. Why does a film transferred to physical media need to slavishly adhere to a theater print/digital file?
@@jachyra9The flames never looked cartoonish like in the 4k version.
And skin colors are supposed to be strong and orange, not pinkish.
Batman v superman had the same issue. But it got a rerelease a few years ago to fix the grade and add the IMAX scenes
this proves that this movie was indeed a 2K master
what is this disc, weird in so many ways
Why is there more edge enhancing in 4k than in Bluray ? Look at the edges of her face against the sky at 2:30
I don't see it on my home setup. Comparisons like this aren't going to be a great representation.
See the introductory warning message.
The SDR grading of the Blu-ray looks exactly like the theatrical screenings.
The HDR version sparks several concerns, particularly with its luminance values, which require screens to make adjustments using different tone-mapping algorithms. Furthermore, the Blu-ray (SDR) version differs from the SDR-100 nits trim-pass of the Dolby Vision distribution on iTunes, making it challenging to determine which version is more authentic.
Which theatrical screenings would those be?
@@jachyra9 The original screenings.
I remember the Color Grading and compared the BD and the 4k back in 2015.
The 4k HDR grading isn’t accurate.
@@martinddhyj - No, you don't remember the color grading of the theatrical screening. Because no one can remember that accurately. And why should the transfer be "accurate" to said theatrical screening in the first place?
@@martinddhyj Multiple color grades can exist for the same film. Dolby Vision Cinema, for instance, aims for a peak brightness of 108 nits in its HDR content. You can't really talk about a lack of accuracy. It's just that the targets (home vs cinema) are different. One aspect that everyone can agree on is that this title would have greatly benefited from dynamic metadata.
Merci pour votre test, mais pourquoi 8 ans après sa sorti en BluRay 4K ?
Parce qu'on ne peut pas tout couvrir en temps voulu et que l'occasion de la sortie Furiosa était à saisir. Merci de nous suivre :)
@@hdnumerique ok merci de votre réponse, je pensais qu'il y avait une raison particulière, ok...
one of the BEST discs for HDR.
Nope.
Cartoony flames and wrong colors.
@@martinddhyj - How are the flames, which are real by the way, "cartoony?" And how are the colors "wrong?"
@@jachyra9they’re too red
@@jacobhaley7144 - What is "too" red?
@@jachyra9 “too” means additional, so “too red” means they’re more red than they should be.
4K version is upscaled from Blu-Ray, so the quality is about the same. However, HDR of Fury Road is highly praised.
Upscaled from DI 2K, not Blu-ray.
The quality is not remotely the same.