The 1979 classic is the definitive starting point for post-apocalyptic cinema, and experiencing it in 1080p BluRay x265 10bit
This looks technical, but it’s a favorite among encoders. Standard consumer video is , meaning it uses 256 shades per RGB channel. 10-bit uses 1,024 shades per channel. Why does this matter for a gritty 1979 film? It eliminates color banding. Banding is those ugly, stair-stepped gradients you see in skies, shadows, or smoke. Mad Max has plenty of dusky horizons and dark night scenes. 10bit encoding smooths those gradients dramatically, and—counterintuitively—it actually compresses better than 8bit for x265, resulting in smaller files with fewer artifacts. -CM- Mad Max -1979- 1080p BluRay x265 10bit AAC...
The movie takes place in a world that has been devastated by an unspecified cataclysmic event. The story follows Max Rockatansky (Mel Gibson), a police officer who patrols the desolate highways in his V8-powered intercept car. Max's life changes when he encounters a gang of marauders, led by the ruthless Johnny Hardacre (Kjell Nilsson), who kill his family and destroy his home. The 1979 classic is the definitive starting point
Released in 1979, Mad Max was a revolutionary entry in the "Australian New Wave". Directed by former medical student , the film was inspired by his experiences as a trauma surgeon witnessing grisly vehicular injuries. Why does this matter for a gritty 1979 film
While the original 1979 film has a gritty, low-budget aesthetic, this 10-bit x265 encode does wonders for the Australian outback. Color Grading:
Mad Max Release Year: 1979 Video Quality: 1080p BluRay Video Codec: x265 Bit Depth: 10bit Audio Codec: AAC