Amazon has
Jurassic Park: Dolby Vision & Atmos Upgrade Edition (4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital) on sale for
$14.99.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Amazon has
Jurassic Park III: Dolby Vision & Atmos Upgrade Edition (4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital) on sale for
$13.99.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Amazon also has
Jurassic World: Dolby Vision & Atmos Upgrade Edition (4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital) on sale for
$18.19.
Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter
Eragorn for sharing this deal.
Note: These titles are expected to be released on March 17, 2026. Please note the combination of "4K UHD, Blu-ray, & Digital Copy" may vary. Not all releases will include all three formats. If the film comes with a digital copy, the code might be expired. Please check individual listings carefully.
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Audio quality differences are probably more perceptible if you have a good system - meaning, plenty of clean amplification (no, you don't necessarily need separates), good neutral speakers, with enough power handling to reach reference volume at your seating distance, and two (or more) subwoofers, capable of pressurizing your space down to 20 Hz and positioned to provide uniform bass across the seating area. Equally as important are the room treatments and bass trapping, plus a decent room correction program.
If you don't have (or care about) such things, then the stream is probably fine. I'd say this is the case for more than 90% of people out there. Home theater nuts who obsess about room correction and sound absorption are certainly the exception, not the rule.
Lastly, the exception to all of this is Kaleidescape, which provides digital downloads with very high bitrates and file sizes that are, in many cases, LARGER than the disc. In some cases, Kaleidescape offers the single-best copy of a movie available to the average consumer (there are even crazier ways to consume content if you're Tom Cruise or Jeff Bezos). Of course, Kaleidescape is a premium service, uses proprietary file formats, and only runs on their rather expensive (relatively speaking) equipment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKwxWPp
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we now have to upgrade again ??
Way to long to explain, cliff notes version:
On picture, the chain goes content>device delivery>display.
There is A LOT that happens from content to actual viewing that affects picture quality.
A key factor is the quality of all 3 of those.
Streaming from the very start is in the hole already.
Another key factor with all this is forms of HDR.
Current displays can't even take full advantage of what static HDR offers let alone dynamic HDR.
The difference between the two can vary widely with disc, streaming TBH is kinda a moot point.
Audio wise, this all or nothing description is kinda silly.
Is it the ideal scenario, very much so.
Do need it to surpass streaming, most definitely not!
As a matter of fact a solid base layer 5.1 setup BR disc easily surpasses Atmos streaming.
TBH you should have that prior to upgrading to object based codecs.
When you do, two pairs of placements is pretty much mandatory to make it worthwhile ime.
Proper implementation is vital but people often don't want to go through the hassle.
Too often people also cut corners with quality and or put the cart before the horse.
Kaleidescape is a good example of this.
IF the actual percentage is 90, I would say they are fine with it because they've never heard the actual difference.
This is especially true regarding object based codecs, most people have never heard a properly implemented one.
People like to say ignorance is bliss, it definitely applies with this ime.
Audio quality differences are probably more perceptible if you have a good system - meaning, plenty of clean amplification (no, you don't necessarily need separates), good neutral speakers, with enough power handling to reach reference volume at your seating distance, and two (or more) subwoofers, capable of pressurizing your space down to 20 Hz and positioned to provide uniform base across the seating area. Equally as important are the room treatments and bass trapping, plus a decent room correction program.
If you don't have (or care about) such things, then the stream is probably fine. I'd say this is the case for more than 90% of people out there. Home theater nuts who obsess about room correction and sound absorption are certainly the exception, not the rule.
Lastly, the exception to all of this is Kaleidescape, which provides digital downloads with very high bitrates and file sizes that are, in many cases, LARGER than the disc. In some cases, Kaleidescape offers the single-best copy of a movie available to the average consumer (there are even crazier ways to consume content if you're Tom Cruise or Jeff Bezos). Of course, Kaleidescape is a premium service, uses proprietary file formats, and only runs on their rather expensive (relatively speaking) equipment.
I know you like to wax poetic, so let's discuss.
On picture, the chain goes content>device delivery>display.
There is A LOT that happens from content to actual viewing that affects picture quality.
A key factor is the quality of all 3 of those.
Streaming from the very start is in the hole already.
Current displays can't even take full advantage of what static HDR offers let alone dynamic HDR.
The difference between the two can vary widely with disc, streaming TBH is kinda a moot point.
Is it the ideal scenario, very much so.
Do need it to surpass streaming, most definitely not!
As a matter of fact a solid base layer 5.1 setup BR disc easily surpasses Atmos streaming.
The point is simply that given a Atmos track (or 5.1, 7.1 whatever) from a stream vs. disc, I firmly believe that you won't hear the differences from a crappy soundbar in a giant open-concept living room with vaulted ceilings and 2s RT60 times, where you definitely will from a properly set up room with good equipment. I love discs (even more than Kaliedescape, for reasons), but if someone has no plans to upgrade from their TV speakers and have a 23* FOV from the 65" TV over the fireplace it's flat-out disingenuous to tell them, "the disc will be SUCH a better experience!"
Is it objectively better? Yes. Will they discern it? Not a chance.
When you do, two pairs of placements is pretty much mandatory to make it worthwhile ime.
Proper implementation is vital but people often don't want to go through the hassle.
Too often people also cut corners with quality and or put the cart before the horse.
Kaleidescape is a good example of this.
This is especially true regarding object based codecs, most people have never heard a properly implemented one.
Nuts like me? I buy my house based on where the HT space is going to go.
And if - IF - you could convince people to buy more than one sub, you can be damn sure they'll be placed at the front of the room, right next to the right and left speaker with no consideration to how 60-ft long sound waves interact in a small space. The bottom line is that most people just don't care, even when they can hear and acknowledge the differences that can be had.
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Unlike you I can't tell you/anyone what people's situation is or what they see and hear.
I can tell you having made the PQ comparison between UHD disc vs UHD streaming several times.
Every person involved was able to "discern" the difference.
On the audio side there was no contest in "discerning" the difference!
This wasn't on what you defined as a "good system" either.
Imo people will clearly "discern" the difference.
Now whether they "care" to get it is a completely different "discussion".
FYI there are many many people including some that consider themselves audiophiles that say those "crappy" Atmos soundbars can rival speaker setups.
Out of curiosity what specific commercial Oled display(s) were you talking about that "comes close" to 10,000 nits!?
I calibrate all my oled displays, it's plenty bright for me.
If I cared enough about PQ I would go with tandem oled from LG/Panny.
FYI they do make 1:1 4k transfers already.
Not many & most aren't that great.
I own one, PQ is pretty good but got it for the audio.
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You "read" about Atmos!?
Oh geez!
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