State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
-
- Posts: 29
- Joined: Sat May 18, 2019 9:44 pm
State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
Maybe such a list exists already. I am looking for UHD / 4k movies which show the best technical quality (video and audio) at the moment.
I know there is https://www.makemkv.com/forum/viewtopic ... 992#p95280, not sure what reference means, maybe this is what could be a filter for me. Not sure if the production date is a hint, There are so many upscaled 4k movies around. I am not so much interested in sci-fi, more in natural nature recordings, but this is 2nd, 1st goal is the best queality available the moment.
I know there is https://www.makemkv.com/forum/viewtopic ... 992#p95280, not sure what reference means, maybe this is what could be a filter for me. Not sure if the production date is a hint, There are so many upscaled 4k movies around. I am not so much interested in sci-fi, more in natural nature recordings, but this is 2nd, 1st goal is the best queality available the moment.
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
https://ultrahd.highdefdigest.com/reviews_overall.html
also a bit outdated, but still a good starting point:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1pUG ... JjzAg/edit
also a bit outdated, but still a good starting point:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1pUG ... JjzAg/edit
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
Blade Runner 2049 (https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Blade-Ru ... ay/189774/) is worth considering.
-
- Posts: 29
- Joined: Sat May 18, 2019 9:44 pm
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
Thank you all, I checked a lot of movies, seems hard to find a movie, which is not outsold, with natural scenes / landscapes. IMHO blurred fantasy scenes are not able to show the quality of a tv.
Blade Runner is on my candidate list as well as Braveheart and Ghostbusters, but not happy with them 100% as a test movie for a tv, at the moment I am ignoring audio, this will be a 2nd step with the movies I put in my list.
Blade Runner is on my candidate list as well as Braveheart and Ghostbusters, but not happy with them 100% as a test movie for a tv, at the moment I am ignoring audio, this will be a 2nd step with the movies I put in my list.
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
Not a movie, but all of the BBC nature documentaries in 4k are just amazing. Must haves in my opinion if you’re looking for demo material
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
Perhaps The Revenant (https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/The-Reve ... ay/147639/) then. I haven't seen this one in 4K, only 1080, but I read good things about it.
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
The Revenant 4K UHD is what I was going to recommend. It was filmed by native 4K cameras, and the scenery and high PQ blew me away. Secondarily, Blade Runner 2049.
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
I would say Gemini Man at Native 4K and 60FPS is the best looking 4K movie I've seen. Only a couple of titles at 60 FPS.
The Revenant is also a good pick.
The Revenant is also a good pick.
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
Note that while it is a great looking movie, Blade Runner is not a good technical demo in regards to HDR as it is one of the many that do "SDR in HDR container". It peaks at ~200nits which is how SDR is expanded within HDR without actually mastering it in HDR. All the 'creators intent' issues aside, if you want demo material that highlights HDR benefit, this one would not be a title to demo.ubuntuuser wrote: ↑Sat Nov 07, 2020 5:45 pmThank you all, I checked a lot of movies, seems hard to find a movie, which is not outsold, with natural scenes / landscapes. IMHO blurred fantasy scenes are not able to show the quality of a tv.
Blade Runner is on my candidate list as well as Braveheart and Ghostbusters, but not happy with them 100% as a test movie for a tv, at the moment I am ignoring audio, this will be a 2nd step with the movies I put in my list.
In my experience, the things that are really going to wow folks are those Planet Earth type UHD's. Anything that is real world without all the color grading and artificial aspects of most movies.
-
- Posts: 29
- Joined: Sat May 18, 2019 9:44 pm
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
In the meantime I found "The Fourth Phase" (snowboard movie), not state of the art from a technical view, 23.9fps only, but maybe someone knows similar movies in 4k. It is not so artificial like the "blockbusters", there is a lot of nature in the movie.
Does anyone know if "The Fourth Phase" was filmed digitally or were some parts digitzed? Looks like that some scenes were taken with a "Go Pro".
Does anyone know if "The Fourth Phase" was filmed digitally or were some parts digitzed? Looks like that some scenes were taken with a "Go Pro".
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
https://www.blu-ray.com/movies/A-Perfec ... ay/284848/
The BBC is about to release a new planet Earth documentary, A Perfect Planet. Hopefully it looks as good as people expect it too.
The BBC is about to release a new planet Earth documentary, A Perfect Planet. Hopefully it looks as good as people expect it too.
-
- Posts: 62
- Joined: Tue Jul 21, 2020 4:52 pm
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
Lucy (2014) is the best looking disc in my 500+ 4K UHD collection. This is despite being one of the first 4K discs.
Seven World One Planet (BCC documentary) is also beautiful (especially the South America episode).
Seven World One Planet (BCC documentary) is also beautiful (especially the South America episode).
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
If you want breath taking landscapes in a 4K UHD movie, give The Bourne Legacy a try. It has awesome LONG flyover shots of Alaska.
-
- Posts: 29
- Joined: Sat May 18, 2019 9:44 pm
Re: State of the art 4k movies from a technical view
> If you want breath taking landscapes in a 4K UHD movie
That's exactly what I am looking for, thanks Phil. Any further suggestions are welcome!
That's exactly what I am looking for, thanks Phil. Any further suggestions are welcome!