Tag Archives: Ultra HD Streaming

The 20th Century Fox releases four UHD titles with HDR on M-GO

After announcing in May that they would be one of the strong supporters of HDR and UHD Blu-ray, Fox followed suit recently by releasing their four first movies in Ultra HD resolution with HDR metadata.

The movies are first released through M-GO, the streaming / download movie service. You need a compatible 4K Samsung TV to download and watch those movies as the company as an exclusive contract for this service.

The four movies that are already released are Life of Pi, Kingman : The Secret Service, The Maze Runner and Exodus : Gods and Kings.

Could it be the first four UHD titles from Fox when the format release ? Only time will tell, but at least we are starting to see more and more content in 4K become available.

Why I Still Believe In Disc Based Movies

With the recent update on what Ultra HD Blu-ray will offer and the fact that the format specs will be officially confirmed in the upcoming weeks according to the always interesting Bill Hunt at The Digital Bits, I’m convinced even more that I want the format to succeed and that I will try at least for one more generation of technology to augment my movie library.

Of course all the digital natives out there are already laughing while reading this and a lot of them will never buy a Blu-ray movie, even less a 4K one. It’s true that the digital streaming convenience is great and that direct access to thousand of movies and hundreds of TV Shows is a blessing. But, as a lot of home theater enthusiasts will tell you, the quality of streaming is not up to par with disc based media.

When you currently look at the ISP Speed Index provided by Netflix, the best streaming bandwidth connection they recorded in November in the USA is 3.27 Mbps. Just as a comparison factor, Blu-ray movies average 20 to 30 Mbps and the announced bandwidth for Ultra HD Blu-ray will be close to 100 Mbps. This means that the movies and TV shows we watch in HD on streaming services are way more compressed and we definitively loose details and both audio and video quality.

With more and more movies shot digitally in 4K and enthusiasts wishing to get the best multimedia experience possible, the bandwidth necessary to reproduce this in the home theater will continue to be a challenge for a while.

On top of this, and yes digital natives will probably laugh again, the collectible factor is still in my mind an important part of buying disc based movie. The capability to see packaging, purchase collector editions of our favorite movies and document your collection is in my mind an important factor.

Yes disc based media sales will continue to go down and will be gradually replaced by streaming and digital. But as a movie collector, I still hope and believe Ultra HD Blu-ray will have a good level of success and will help disc based medias continue to be the best way to experience movies at home as they were created by the artists behind them.