Sigamos con el tema monos.
Aquí algunas de las reviews profesionales más importante de la UHD
LA GUERRA DEL PLANETA DE LOS SIMIOS
Video
The below video score and related critique of things here are based solely upon my viewing of the 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray presentation of Fox’s
War for the Planet of the Apes. WSB’s Aaron Neuwirth covered the Blu-ray only version of the film
here.
- Encoding: HEVC / H.265
- Resolution: 4K (2160p)
- Aspect Ratio: 2.40:1
- Clarity/Detail: Despite the sad tone of it all everything looks like a million bucks throughout here with pristine visuals and razor sharp detail. Let’s examine how that is. First of all the textures are insane here. Let’s take the clothing for example. The coat the little girl here pops with the utmost of clarity within the wool employed to create it. Then there’s intricate details in all the military garb right down to the used weaponry. Next up is the fur on those apes. Holy wow Batman! It’s exquisite down to the individual strands from the stray grays on Caesar’s chin to copper speckles on Maurice’s brow. It’s also the little things that kill here too, which are all brilliantly rendered and captured throughout in this one like the tiny reflections of flames found in Caesar’s eyes.
- Depth: Everywhere you look in this one the scope of things are deep, wide and forever ranging. There are many examples of this too such as any scene within the woods and the apes’ village, constrained in the Colonel’s fortress and even the young apes escaping over the heads of the soldiers. It doesn’t hurt things either that all onscreen characters have a clearly distinct three-dimensional pop to them all.
- Black Levels: The black levels are all deep, dark and natural throughout. Make no mistake about it this is a very dark film and lots of it takes place in the shadows. Thankfully the HDR keeps everything in check to ensure nothing gets hideously lost. Since it is dark contrasting moments like orange fire and explosions, green sight lasers and more pop with the utmost of ferocity in this one. In other words I love the contrast!
- Color Reproduction: For the most part this one is neutral like any good post apocalyptic film should look like. However, give this one some daylight or sunshine and watch this mutha come to life. Things look stunning in the daylight against the bright white snow from the orange fiery fur of Maurice to breathtaking pink blossoms growing on a tree.
- Flesh Tones: The skin tones are spot on natural, authentic looking and accurate throughout.
- Noise/Artifacts: I didn’t notice a single thing throughout that would make you mutter any unkind words against how things look here
War for the Planet of the Apes (4K UHD Blu-ray Review)
.........
Atención al principio de la siguiente revisión, que demuestra la complejidad del HDR
Video (4K UHD)
Turn down your brightness. That’s step one for watching War of the Planet of the Apes. Divergent did this too on UHD, mastered a bit off from the usual IRE levels, requiring an adjustment of four notches (on an LG set, anyway) to achieve true black in the negative space. From there, the disc is fine.
With a somewhat faded look, there’s a dusting of HDR for much of this movie. Shots of beaches near sunset glisten beautifully. Spotlights inside the militia camp sear onto characters. Torches do the same. Color remains reserved, save for some forest greenery in the early parts. Density will sprout from those greens. Some green laser sights dazzle too in the opening act. Mostly, War for the Planet of the Apes sits in a dreary collection of blues.
Coloring work begins to cut down depth, robbing War of the Planet of the Apes of true black. There’s certainly contrast; inside the base, at night, the screen fills with substantial depth. Much of the running time is made up of travels across snowy exteriors, flattening out into a series of grays.
Thankfully, this 2K source can astound with fidelity. The level of texture work involved with the Apes is a marvel. Their fur stands out in any condition, rendered wet or dry. Their skin features pores and their eyes visibly pooling tears. Gorgeous environments keep the ape’s travels lively, always rich in detail. For the few human characters, they gain equal clarity. Even the youngest in the cast, Miller, shows detail when the camera first zooms in on her in bed.
War for the Planet of the Apes 4K UHD Blu-ray Review - DoBlu.com
War for the Planet of the Apes is presented on 4K UHD courtesy of 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment with a 2160p transfer in 2.40:1. This 4K UHD version shows the same kind of sometimes subtle but still noticeable uptick in detail and fine detail levels that have been seen in other outings sourced from 2K DIs. There's an increased feeling of palpability in things like the creased textures on the simians' muzzles, and even some of the dense foliage in the forest scenes. The film's unrelenting darkness also doesn't mask shadow detail quite as much in this version as in the 1080p version. Interestingly, HDR really hasn't altered the palette all that much, with the long gray and blue sequences looking more or less identical to their 1080p counterparts, albeit with arguably better suffusion. There's perhaps a greater range of tones in the teal to green ranges, both of which are exploited regularly throughout the film, but, again, really not to any overly dramatically noticeable levels. One notable exception to the palette differences (or lack thereof) is the kind of yellow "showdown" scene between Caesar and The Colonel toward the film's climax, which in the 4K UHD version is skewed slightly more toward orange. While the precision of the CGI is probably even more pronounced in the 4K UHD version, I occasionally felt like things looked slightly more artificial.
War for the Planet of the Apes 4K Blu-ray
..........
Video: 5/5
3D Rating: NA
The film’s theatrical 2.40:1 theatrical aspect ratio is faithfully reproduced using the HEVC codec delivering a transfer in 2160p resolution. While the opening forest warfare and the closing sequences across the Sierras offer lush color, most of the film occurs in dark caves or in the bleak white of wintertime which isn’t much conducive to a rainbow of different hues. Sharpness is exemplary throughout, and the judicious use of HDR10 means the whites in the snow scenes dazzle but are completely without blooming while occasional bursts of light from gunfire, explosions, laser beams, and the like jump off the screen while black levels remain inky rich and deep. The movie has been divided into 28 chapters.
War for the Planet of the Apes UHD Review • Home Theater Forum
........
The war for the planet spreads to Ultra HD with a lovely and overall satisfying HEVC H.265 encode in HDR10, bringing the fight home with an often-stunning picture quality that ultimately defeats the Blu-ray.
Shot on the excellent Arri Alexa 65 camera system, capable of up to 6.5K resolution, the freshly-minted transfer enjoys a great uptick in terms of clarity and detailing. This is particularly true in the close-ups of the amazingly realistic faces of the apes, showing the ultra-fine lines and wrinkles around the eyes while also exposing each individual pockmark, freckle and minute scar. The same can be said of the humans, revealing every negligible blemish and imperfection. The CG hairs of the apes are razor-sharp and seem to move independently of each other while the stitching and threading in the military uniforms are distinct, and every nook and cranny is plain to see inside the Caesar's waterfall hideout or in the Colonel's weapons-depot base.
However, there are several minor instances of poor resolution, evidence of this transfer being an upconversion of a 2K digital intermediate, most notably during nighttime sequences at the base. When Caesar is tied to the large "X"-shaped post and the search light passes by, the hairs and faces of the apes appear a bit noisy and show a tad of aliasing along the sharpest edges of the post and hairs. The many extreme wide shots also sadly look softer and blurrier than other parts and when compared to the Blu-ray.
On the other hand, the real win in this 4K presentation is the spot-on contrast though it doesn't push peak luminance to the limits, staying true to the intentions of the filmmakers where everything looks more dour and somber. So, although whites are not as brilliant as in HD, specular highlights are nonetheless a noteworthy improvement, making the individual crystals in the snow twinkle brighter, the light shining on faces pop more realistic and revealing a bit more detailing in the various light fixtures. Better yet, the 2.40:1 image displays richer, silkier blacks, making the different shades in the hairs of the apes more apparent and showing greater gradational variation in the shadows. Objects remain plainly visible during the many poorly-lit interiors, and details are never at a loss in the darkest portions of the frame, providing the 2160p video with a beautiful cinematic quality that feels as though watching it for the first time.
As with its HD SDR counterpart, the stylized photography is deliberately gloomy and near monochromatic, but in 4K HDR, the palette is surprisingly richer and more varied with primaries that are noticeably more vibrant. The red in blood is of a deeper, crimson shade while the green in the surrounding foliage pops with life, and the blue in the sky and clothing provides a tranquil realism. Secondary hues remain largely limited, but the presentation is now awash with more warmth and a wider selection, as the afternoon skyline shines with an array of golden-amber yellow flawlessly blending into a pink, magenta and darker blue splendor. The flesh tones of all the characters appear more natural with the humans looking a bit peachier and reddish, and the fire from explosions and torches intensely radiate and brighten scenes with a reddish-orange glow
War for the Planet of the Apes - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Ultra HD Review | High Def Digest
En general todo puntuaciones máximas o muy cerca de serlo como cabría esperar de un título reciente de esta envergadura.