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![]() The movie was shot at a resolution of 2.8K and reportedly finished at 2K. The UHD does have more of a clean, healthy sheen about it. Some might understandably have a few reservations. Add in superiorĬontrast and color depth in the brighter scenes - Gamora's green skin pops on Xandar - and the HDR color spectrum is only a boon for the movie, On the contrary, the HDR spectrum looks quite nice and organic in isolation. Subjectively better - richer, deeper, healthier, more natural - and it's a case where watching the UHD rather than stopping to compare one versionĪgainst the other will likely not yield any disappointment. The image transitions from evenly lit toĭense and dark on UHD, and the scene to follow with Ronan, Gamora, and Nebula enjoys superior blacks and shadow detail but the scene is renderedįar darker, reducing the vitality of the blue and green character face paint to dim shadowy tones. It's almost shocking how much the HDR alters the color temperature. Compare a scene where Quill is speaking to Yondu inĬhapter three at the 12-minute mark. ![]() The flip side is that the movie's more shadowy low light scenes look significantly darker. Digital readouts, beams of light, anything of high intensity luminance finds another gear for brightness andĪccuracy. Indeed, points of intense light are electric. The same can be said of Star-Lord's red-eyed helmet, which presents with impressive intensity and depth beyond the Blu-ray's capabilities. The gradating orange and yellow colors appear far more complete and prominent ![]() The opening titles deliver a satisfying add to color depth and vitality. ![]() The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc. ![]()
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