DVD can still deliver!
I disagree with Mark Craven on the quality of the DVD picture (Digital Copy, HCC #340). I have a JVC N5 4K projector aimed at an 8ft-wide CinemaScope screen with a viewing distance of 11ft and a 4K Panasonic player.
I was concerned that my old DVDs would look terrible upscaled to 4K but the majority look fine and some look even better than on my last HD-only projector, in particular my Thunderbirds boxset and a lot of BFI's British Transport Films. The 4:3 pictures are about 4ft 6ins wide. One revelation is the 1961 Rock Hudson film Come September, shown at full 8ft-wide CinemaScope ratio - it outperforms some of my Blu-rays for detail and clarity.
Admittedly, the DVDs are never going to look as good as a UHD disc but I certainly will not be getting rid of them, particularly as most are not available in HD.
David Simpson
Mark Craven replies: I didn't want that column to come across as a take-down of the entire DVD format, as a) when it first launched, it was brilliant, and b) my DVD copy of Brewster's Millions of course isn't indicative of the quality of DVDs in general. As with Blu-rays and 4K Blu-rays, image quality varies from disc to disc.
However, times have changed and improvements in encoding, resolution, dynamic range and colour handling are beginning to make my DVD collection which I've been slowly trimming down - look long in the tooth.
This story is from the May 2023 edition of Home Cinema Choice.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the May 2023 edition of Home Cinema Choice.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
AV Avenger
You should think twice before accepting an invitation to play Resident Evil 4 with spatial audio in a haunted prison, warns Steve May
Catalogue classic Star Wars: Ep. VI - Return of the Jedi → Ultra HD Blu-ray, Disney
Forty years on from the movie's cinema release, Anton van Beek ponders what might have been if things had gone a little diff erently during the making of Return of the Jedi…
Feedback
Got an axe to grind? Need to comment on current tech? Want to share your knowledge with our readers? Team HCC is here to help
M&K Sound V12
TIME ON TEST: Three years REVIEWER: Steve Withers
Sony 'bar demands to be upgraded
This well-specified Dolby Atmos soundbar may have a mid-range price tag, but you'll soon want to spend more, cautions Steve May
Short and sweet
Marantz's compact AV receiver returns with a new look and boosted features – Jamie Biesemans slips it into his AV rig
Discreet delivery
A slim, stylish Scandinavian on-wall system impresses Mark Craven with its handling of the sweet stuff
One project, two rooms
Dan Sait reports on a custom install where a JVC PJ/ Atmos system is joined by a stylish media den
THE KING OF B RDA HOLLYWOOD
Three of his movies have taken over $2billon at the global box office, he's pioneered SFX and 3D technologies, and he's been to the very bottom of the Pacific Ocean. That's James Cameron by the way, not Anton van Beek
System selector!
Given three similar budgets, Mark Craven, Steve May and John Archer assemble three different AV setups focused on movies, streaming and gaming