![]() Mars feel less natural to me than they do on the ordinary Blu-ray. Oddly, though, the UHD BD’s exterior shots on One or two contrast-rich interior sequences show off the benefits of HDR’s extra luminance range small light peaks like the sun reflecting on space suits and helmets look more natural and pronounced and the orange look to the red planet’s surface looks slightly bolder. ![]() ![]() HDR) technology available with Ultra HD Blu-ray (and which I explain in jargon-free terms here) also feels quite subdued compared with some of the other Ultra HD Blu-ray releases seen to date. The Martian’s approach to the high dynamic range ( Some sharply contrasting edges in the image occasionally look artificially sharpened too, while shots containing a lot of motion show minor signs of blurring.
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