Due to a recently increased upload speed, I can now stream to some of my users 4K content from my Plex server. However, I do not have infinite hard drive space, so I would, at least initially, prefer to limit my 4K collection to films and TV show shows that actually benefit from it.

Personally, and with several of my friends, we’ve come to the agreement that 4K video has about as much advantage as 720 versus 1080. It’s not that big of a leap, and often not entirely worth the upgrade (when accounting for the hard drive space consideration, the added darkness, etc). However, with some films and TV shows, it really does make a huge difference.

With that in mind, what films and TV shows would you recommend that definitely benefit from 4K viewing?

  • I remember when 1080p was still new and we finally got an HD TV, the first movie I watched in 1080p made the actors look pretty ugly in that you could see every pore and defect in a close up shot.

    I have yet to see anything in 4K that was quite as dramatic. I don’t even really notice a difference between 1080p and 4K unless it’s a 2D game with bad scaling so making it 4K makes everything small as hell.

  • @tankplanker@lemmy.world
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    46 hours ago

    What most people are describing here as an improvement is actually HDR rather than a straight resolution upgrade. Not all 4k downloads (or even actual streams) include HDR for all films, so concentrating on films with HDR and preferably Dolby Vision, assuming your TV supports it, is what I would recommend.

    Obviously, not all films are going to be better just because they now have HDR. Even if they have good HDR, there might be other issues such as the green tint for Fellowship of the Ring or the recent problems with the Aliens AI remaster.

    Final thing, if your TV is only average at HDR, then it might not even be worth seeking them out. I went from an average 7 year old LED with basic HDR support to a top of the range LG oled, and it’s night and day better with HDR for good material.

  • @Zozano@lemy.lol
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    311 hours ago

    I’ve noticed dark horror movies are much better in 4k because they normally have much better dynamic range.

    Longlegs has quite a few scenes with visuals you’ll miss if you’re watching with a poor quality video.

    Don’t breathe was also fantastic in 4K.

    • @Sl00k@programming.dev
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      8 hours ago

      Action, but 1917 has some incredible dark 4k scenes especially if you have an OLED or Mini LED TV

  • Toes♀
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    110 hours ago

    The really old stuff like Clint Eastwood’s works. The old film retained many details that weren’t in the original releases.

  • @burgersc12@mander.xyz
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    22 hours ago

    If you’re streaming, the difference between 4k and 1080p is almost not noticeable. You need to have an actual 4k TV (no upscaling) and either

    1. buy the Blurays with 4k
    2. 4k files (not transcoded at all)

    To see the real difference. IMO 1080p at full bitrate (bluray quality) is enough for the vast majority of audiences.

      • @burgersc12@mander.xyz
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        13 hours ago

        Well a lot of people see “4k” TVs without realizing they are actually 1080p with upscaling, so you think you’re getting 4k but in reality you have dogshit

    • EleventhHourOP
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      8 hours ago

      I found that movie to be just a bit disappointing. But it did look good.

      Edit: downvoted because I didn’t like a particular film? wtf Lemmy

      • @ch00f@lemmy.world
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        421 hours ago

        Yeah definitely outdated and flat racist at parts (especially when you learn how little of it actually happened), but it’s an incredible looking film especially when you realize the time it was made.

  • Illecors
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    24 hours ago

    In general - things that are colourful and/or have special effects.

    Blue Planet, Top Gun Maverick, Fast and Furious saga (not the first few, 4k made no difference there) come to mind first atm.

    Things that have acting and script itself as the main selling point generally are perfectly fine in 1080p. The Office and Slow Horses would be a good example of that, I suppose.

    Personally, I get everything I want my son to watch in the highest quality I can - Shawshank Redemptiom and Shutter Island are the latest additions to my library that, I think, would absolutely fine in 1080p, but… 4K HDR it is :D

    • slazer2au
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      213 hours ago

      Fast and Furious saga (not the first few, 4k made no difference there)

      Like the first one where the plot is to steal DVD players.

  • @IMALlama@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    It probably comes down to how the show was originally shot and/or upscaled. IMO it also comes down to your vision, screen size, and viewing distance.

    I remember the early 00s having a high prevalence of, “raa, your eyes can’t tell the difference between 720 and 1080 at 10+ feet unless you have a bolliondy inch display!!!”. I would argue that you can see say 1080 vs 4k on a 50ish inch screen at 10 feet, but the difference isn’t that significant. At least with my vision. It’s the most obvious with high contrast items, like black text on white background.

    Newer movie/show shot with sharp modern glass on a high resolution media? 4k. Older upscaled show? I would lean 1080, unless it was shot on film and they rescanned it.

    It will also really matter how the video was compressed. I’ve seen low resolution videos look much better than higher resolution videos thanks to the codec and/or settings that were used for the higher resolution video.

  • @Luci@lemmy.ca
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    124 hours ago

    Greyhound was great (AV wise) in 4k 7.1, might be a good one if you like war movies. Other than that the movie is bleh to be honest. I only put it on to show off my setup…

    • EleventhHourOP
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      124 hours ago

      Yeah, I’m not really looking for shows that show off the 4K. I’ve had 4K TVs before. I’m just trying to be a bit discriminating regarding what I spend hard drive space on. I don’t wanna get a huge video file in 4K if the 4K experience isn’t worth it. You know what I mean?