Real or Fake 4K in fact rates Interstellar as "Real 4K". On the digital side, the visual effects were supposed to be 4K+ renders and all this done in a 4K digital intermediate. I had a look at the 70mm scenes from The Dark Knight Rises and thought that looked better than Interstellar. It's one thing to pixel peek at inches away from the computer monitor and noticing slight differences but sitting from a few feet away looking at my 75" TV screen, what little improvement here is simply insignificant. Wasn't 65mm/15-perf supposed to be something like "18K"? At least a difference was evident with Dunkirk, but sadly not here. I did not expect much from 35mm, but I was clearly disappointed in the 70mm portions.
Real or fake 4k blu ray movie#
As I've said before, I'm certainly not going to run to buy a 4K version of movies filmed in 35mm unless it's one of my favourites and this movie certainly did nothing to change my perspective on this.
Real or fake 4k blu ray 1080p#
But there's an issue with the black level not quite up to par even compared to the standard 1080P Blu-Ray!įrom a resolution perspective, I honestly don't think the 35mm portions of the movie improved in resolution over the madVR upscaled 1080P. Sure, the color and contrast of the HDR effect on a good screen distinguishes the 4K version whether you prefer it is a subjective matter. No such luck suggesting that there's minimal resolution difference here.Īs noted above, I can't but feel a bit disappointed by the UHD Blu-Ray version of Interstellar. Resolution-wise, I would have thought I'd see more in the rings of Saturn, maybe more subtle bands would show up, or perhaps better demarcation between the different rings. You can actually see that the black level of the UHD Blu-Ray is not as dark in the example above also with the Endurance but this image of Saturn against the blackness of space is more obvious.
Even if the HDR version might be enhancing the brightness, the black level looks like a dark gray with slight greenish tinge instead of true black.
Looks like there's some kind of black level issue here. Compared to the standard 1080P, it's surprisingly not as black! I don't think it has to do with madVR's HDR-to-SDR processing since I have not noticed this problem elsewhere (plus madVR has no issues with the pure black letterboxing of 35mm scenes). What color is space? BLACK, right? Notice something rather disconcerting with the UHD Blu-Ray version. You're going to have to click on the image or download it, display 1:1 and on a high quality black or dark gray screen to really appreciate this.