![]() ![]() Almost as if a bunch of toys really have come to life before your very eyes. ![]() At plenty of other times, too - especially during scenes in the antique shop, or close-ups on any of the toys that wear fabric outfits - the image looks fantastically detailed, textured, and three-dimensional. Right in the opening scene you can see a clear difference in detail and sharpness between the 4K and HD discs, for instance - particularly in the shots outside in the rain. And this upgrade certainly applies to the image’s fine detail levels. It delivers a consistently worthwhile and sometimes excellent upgrade over the HD Blu-ray. That’s not to say, though, that Toy Story 4 isn’t a seriously good looking 4K Blu-ray. Unfortunately, I don’t think there’s quite enough we can glean from this 4K Blu-ray picture to enable us to form a definite conclusion on the truth of the film’s resolution ‘journey’.Īll the toys look lovely in HDR and wide color. There’s some debate as to whether Toy Story 4 was the first animated film to actually be rendered in 4K, or whether it was rendered in 2K and then upscaled to a 4K Digital Intermediate for its cinematic run, with this 4K DI forming the foundation for the 4K Blu-ray’s picture. Key kit used for this review: Panasonic 65GZ1500, Samsung 65Q90R, Panasonic UB820, Oppo 205 What you get: Region-free 4K Blu-ray, Region A/B/C HD Blu-ray, Movies Anywhere codeĮxtra Features: Commentary track featuring director Josh Cooley and producer Mark Neilsen Featurettes on updating Bo Beep the cast and crew’s love of toys creating five of the key new characters recording and working with the voice acting files Anatomy of a scene the evolution of the relationship between Woody and Buzz six deleted scenes with introductions by Cooley promos and trailers Toy’s View ‘fly through’ of key locations ![]()
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