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James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1 Movie Streaming

March 3rd, 2010 · No Comments
James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1

James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1 Movie Streaming. James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1 Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1
Average customer review:

James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1 is available for streaming or downloading.

Click Here to Stream or Download James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1

Let me first location that I was completely unaware of the problems with playing these movies until I browsed through the Amazon reviews. It is disturbing to constantly hear of people who paid gracious money for their expensive players not being able to fully be pleased movies that are expected to play on them. However, I have not experienced any problems playing a Bluray movie ever and this review is only discussing my personal experience with this specific package.

Buy,Download, Or Stream James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1! Click Here

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THE GOOD:

- Astonishing video quality, better than what the audience saw on release date on some of the older movies.

- Lots of extras, most of them worth watching or listening to.

Buy,Download, Or Stream James Bond Blu-ray Collection Three-Pack, Vol. 1! Click Here

- Aesthetic packaging.

THE NOT SO GOOD:

- The sound restoration not as superb as the video.

- Some of the ‘extras’ sections would support from a ‘play all’ option.

- The boxe could be a bit slimmer.

- May require upgrades on obvious players.

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The overall impression is of quality, inside and out. The box could be a petite smaller but the packaging is resplendent. There’s a transparent plastic lunge veil over a solid cardboard box holding a puny binder on which the 3 individual movie disks are pages. Each movie comes on one disk, holding the movie itself and in fabulous amount of extras.

The menu interface is well organized and there’s is even some humor in labeling. For example, the option that plays the movie is labeled ‘The Mission’ while the historic promotional material is found under ‘The Propaganda’. Depending on which fraction you may be, menu options branch into further sub-menus.

The extras are numerous and, for the most fragment spirited. The Dr. No disk, for example, has a very informative HD documentary on the restoration process and we score to learn who did what, why and how. Then, we observe 1962 trailers, a contemporary documentary on the making of the movie, a 1960’s interview with a gun specialist discussing the various James Bond handguns, even radio commercials.

The sound options include the modern sound which, in the older releases is ‘mono’ but all movies have surround 5.1 as the default. The sound wasn’t upgraded and improved to the degree that the relate was but, it’s understandable. Going from mono to 5.1 surround would be the equivalent of upgrading from dim and white to full-color 3-D in the world of images. The situation where some of the older installments demonstrate their age is the sound.

When it comes to the pictures, the best that I can say is that you’ve got to perceive it to enjoy it. The restoration of the older movies started with the right current negative, which is the one copy that’s almost never touched. Once the copy was digitized as a 4000 lines resolution digital copy (Bluray is 1080) every frame was reprocessed to eliminate any possible defects from ‘dirty optics’, such as the proverbial hair that we sometimes look on the older movies to scratches, abominable exposure, color brilliance. The restorers’ goal for the demolish result, and this concerns the video only, not the sound quality, was to order what would appear to be a contemporary movie with a 60’s or 70’s theme rather than a 60’s or 70’s movies. In my understanding, they succeeded.

My overall rating is a solid five-stars. Impartial about everything in this release is superlative: the physical packaging, the interface produce, the extras, the video quality. The sound is not so sterling on the older movies but, given the place of sound restoration technologies, I did not feel compelled to bewitch a star because the faded movies sounded more or less like they did on release date.

Please effect that and I am not factoring in player issues because, sooner or later, those are going to be addressed.

There will always be debates on who makes the best Bond, and this trilogy gives you a sampling of three strong contenders spanning 40+ years of Bond: Sean Connery in “Dr. No” - the film that started it all, Roger Moore in his first turn as Bond, “Live and Let Die” and Pierce Brosnan as 007 in “Die Another Day” the final film before the series “re-boot.”

When I save the “Dr. No” Blu-ray Disc into my player for the first time, my jaw hit the floor. The delectable detailed images that appeared on a expansive 1080p projection cloak looked more like a movie made last year than one made in 1962. The main reason the films gaze so helpful is that all twenty of the pre-Craig Bond movies were cleaned up and restored with ample care by Lowry Digital Images, using the current camera negatives. The first nine films (including “Dr. No” and “Live and Let Die” from this residence) were all scanned at a whopping 4K resolution, and the other eleven were re-mastered at chunky HD 1920×1080 resolution - a perfect fit for Blu-ray disc. While the 12 megapixel (4000×3000 pixel) mastering of the first nine films may seem like overkill, for 1080p high definition’s 2 Megapixel image, the results announce for themselves.

The sound is no swagger either, with the films re-mastered in lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 Surround (the modern mono or stereo track is also included on each of the older films, for the purists) . The producers went wait on to the unique master recordings, cleaned up the audio and created a truly immersive surround sound stage for each film. If you haven’t seen the early Bond movies before, then you’re in for a treat with these Bond classics on Blu-ray.

As to compatibility, it is essential to mark that some players (notably the Samsung BD-P1500 and LG BH200) do currently have playback problems on these discs. It’s critical to know that if you maintain one of these players. But this should not be a reflection on the software, unbiased because the player manufacturers have improperly implemented the Blu-ray specifications. Also, LG and Samsung have committed to providing firmware updates to fix any playback issues with these titles. Also, most of the unique generation players (including the newer Panasonic and Sony players with the latest firmware applied) have no problems playing these discs.

Full reviews of each of these Blu-ray discs are available on Vast Represent Immense Sound.
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