Ender's Game (2013) 1080p 7.1 BDRip x264 High Quality - Judasseeders: 11
leechers: 17
Ender's Game (2013) 1080p 7.1 BDRip x264 High Quality - Judas (Size: 8.98 GB)
Description
Ender's Game
[FORMAT]:........[ MP4 x264 VBR 9,900 kb/s (High@L4.1) {CRF Placebo} [SETTINGS]:......[ SUBME=11 (Full RD) / ME=TESA {SATD Exhaustive} [BITS/(PIXEL*F)]:[ 0.268 [FILE SIZE]:.....[ 8.97GB [RESOLUTION]:....[ 1920x800 [FRAME RATE]:....[ 23.976 fps [AUDIO STREAM 1]:[ AC-3 5.1 Surround 384 kb/s 48khz {DD5.1} [AUDIO STREAM 2]:[ AAC 7.1 Surround 1,280 kb/s 48khz (AAC/LC) {2-Pass} [LANGUAGE]:......[ English [SUBTITLES]:.....[ English (SRT File) [RUNTIME]:.......[ 1Hr 53Min 48Sec (114 Minutes) [CHAPTERS].......[ YES [SOURCE].........[ 1080p Physical Retail Blu-ray Region 1|A NOTE: It is HIGHLY RECOMMENDED that you TRY the 2nd audio track to experience a better audio experience if your system supports it properly. A valid media player or device MUST have the ability to allow you to switch audio stream/tracks such as VLC or most smart tvs. The primary AC-3 AKA Dolby Digital 5.1 audio track is provided for MAXIMUM surround sound capability and for pure bitstreaming support for those without AAC5.1-7.1 playback abilities, or are restricted to using a digital connection that uses fiber/toslink/coax/spdif and doesn't have realtime dolby digital live or dts-connect abilities. Additionally, advantages of the AC-3 stream is flawless direct realtime downmixing to all stereo devices without any potential decoding issues anywhere along the line, be it using laptop/headphones or a dedicated stereo amplifier, it should reproduce very well. Those with 6/7/8 Channel HDMI using LPCM or direct analog connections, you should be fully capable of playing the 2nd stream to experience a full audio spectrum version of the movie. DTS-HD is incapable of provided more than 5.1 audio @ 1536kbps (requires DTS-HD Master which is usually 4-6x larger file), AAC5.1 @ 960kbps or AAC7.1 @ 1280kbps should be unparalleled in terms of quality/size ratio, while providing the additional channels in the event of a movie being 6.1 or 7.1. Screenshot Previews: http://i.imgur.com/Gf01nXN.png http://i.imgur.com/00mCPVe.png http://i.imgur.com/5cJoNcc.png http://i.imgur.com/FxRgDej.png http://i.imgur.com/fpoQwmj.png http://i.imgur.com/7V872WN.png http://i.imgur.com/jTT11pb.png http://i.imgur.com/513zmT7.png http://i.imgur.com/CXfdMwD.png http://i.imgur.com/ojd3WVq.png Please, be patient with seeding... Enjoy ;) Feel free to leave a + vote and a comment, Thank You! Judas's Note: Time to get the best bang for the bit in audio too, Can't really get any better than this for an MP4. Sharing WidgetTrailerScreenshotsAll Comments |
why would you downvote it though, there was nothing wrong with it?
Several encoders apply denoise and sharpening effects to try to counter the denoise effects, this tends to add additional "errors" to the video. However for many people the initial effect is visually "better" but in reality a number of other issues that may not go initially seen, are present.
On the 146" Display I have here which is 1080p, the video looks pretty much indistinguishable from the physical bluray, the grain effect is clearly visible, but it's consistent. The biggest shock is watching a ultra Clean 3D animated film and then watching a film like ender's game where there is this grain/noise throughout it.
Many directors/producers still prefer the heavy film effects.. just look at 300, or the Man of Steel which also has about the same level of grain/noise as ender's in much the same fashion. A lot of it is post processed film effects in order to maintain the "old style film" as some of these directors insist on using to maintain story like NOT REAL like environment (paraphrasing what some have specifically stated). It's always nice to see a film 100% clean though, this just doesn't happen to be one of them.
Thanks Judas