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Mission impossible 5 movie review
Mission impossible 5 movie review












mission impossible 5 movie review

The colours here are superb, rendered with depth and vibrance that gives the feature a new lease of life (the opening pre-credits sequence and title sequence are blisteringly punchy), positively bringing it into the modern playing field alongside its later sequels, with rich blood and lipstick reds the most prominent in the palette, but colours refined across the whole spectrum, noting lush greens in the reception and prominent blues on little touches like the lighting and the moonlight on the riverfront, and refining dominant mahogany browns. And that's even before we get to the HDR and WCG. Effects hold up remarkably well, especially considering the 2K restriction on them, with only a scant couple of shots across the entire runtime faltering in what is an otherwise very impressive presentation. De Palma's crazy camera-angle close-ups look fabulous, better than ever before. Sure the film is 22 years old and the effects are a little limited, but the original cinematography holds up spectacularly well, with the new 4K remaster bringing forth a keen level of precision and some hitherto unseen detail that likely - alone - leaves this the best the film has ever looked.

mission impossible 5 movie review

Mission impossible 5 movie review upgrade#

Undoubtedly the Mission: Impossible upgrade on Ultra HD Blu-ray is one of the most clear-cut of the entire set, providing not only a world's apart difference from the original Blu-ray but also a presentation which is oftentimes pretty impressive demo material.














Mission impossible 5 movie review