- Joined
- Feb 8, 1999
- Messages
- 18,425
- Real Name
- Robert Harris
Like the first offering of the series, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets makes for a superior 4k home theatre experience.
Like Sorcerer's Stone, it finds its roots finished as film, and not 2k data, which gives Warner Bros. a quality source for a data harvest.
And it shows.
Although similar to the first film in the series, I found HDR to be a tad heavy, everything else image wise is superb.
Grain structure, image stability, color, and generally, black levels are superior.
Audio is represented via DTS:X, which beautifully fills a room.
A great deal of care has gone into bringing the Potter series to 4k, which overall is a rationale to once again (probably for the fifth time) gift your earlier representations of the film, and upgrade.
Image - 4.5
Audio - 5 (DTS:X)
4k - 5
Pass / Fail - Pass
Upgrade from Blu-ray - Yes
Highly Recommended
RAH
Like Sorcerer's Stone, it finds its roots finished as film, and not 2k data, which gives Warner Bros. a quality source for a data harvest.
And it shows.
Although similar to the first film in the series, I found HDR to be a tad heavy, everything else image wise is superb.
Grain structure, image stability, color, and generally, black levels are superior.
Audio is represented via DTS:X, which beautifully fills a room.
A great deal of care has gone into bringing the Potter series to 4k, which overall is a rationale to once again (probably for the fifth time) gift your earlier representations of the film, and upgrade.
Image - 4.5
Audio - 5 (DTS:X)
4k - 5
Pass / Fail - Pass
Upgrade from Blu-ray - Yes
Highly Recommended
RAH
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