NOWY, ORYGINALNY, FOLIA
PRODUKT DOSTĘPNY OD RĘKI
Płyty nie posiadają polskiej wersji językowej
Brak polskich napisów, lektora/dubbingu
wydanie angielskie
język: angielski
Tytuł Oryginalny: The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Extended Edition
plus
over 9 hours of special features !
Audio
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1
Italian, French: Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles
English, French, Italian, Dutch
The 3D Extended Edition set includes five BD-50 discs:
two for the 3D version of the 183-minute feature film (with a break midway through the extended cut),
one for the 2D version of the EE (with no breaks or disc swaps to be had),
and two more discs devoted to nine hours of HD bonus content.
Thankfully, both the MVC-encoded 3D and AVC-encoded 2D presentations are virtually
identical in quality -- to each other and to the March 2013 Blu-ray releases that preceded
them -- and I didn't catch sight of any significant compression artifacts or anomalies whatsoever.
(Be particularly wary of screenshot scrutiny on this point, as still images, as always, can be deceiving.)
As before, the video presentation of The Hobbit wows, dazzles and thoroughly impresses
with two stunning 1080p video encodes: an MVC MPEG-4 3D experience and an AVC MPEG-4 2D presentation,
each true to Jackson and cinematographer Andrew Lesnie's every intention.
First, a small word of warning: Jackson is a proponent of world-expanding 3D;
the sort that draws viewers into the image rather than assaulting them with overabundant
gimmicks and screen-piercing distractions.
In the Blu-ray.com forum, the approach has been labeled "conservative 3D," and for the most part,
this is conservative 3D. Depth and dimensionality are outstanding, with vast landscapes,
convincingly distant horizons, rocks that jut out of the ground, trolls that
loom high overhead, wargs whose muzzles inch closer and closer, goblins that push our heroes
forward toward a most unsightly, all too three-dimensional Goblin King, and twisted
riverfolk who seem to peer out of their cave and into your home theater.
The occasional sword, fluttering bird, swinging ax or tumorous flesh-sack protrude nicely
(or not so nicely, depending on the visuals), but again, this is by and large a conservative 3D experience.