Co do samego filmu to za zwykłego Blu-Reya z polski zapłaciłbym 85 zł a tu dostanę UHDBD + BD za ok. 90 zł, tylko bez polskich napisów, więc warto zaryzykować.
Europa nie dostała, np. w ogóle nowych "Piratów z Karaibów" na UHDBD.
Ja posiadam ten tv, tylko 49 cali:
https://hdtvpolska.com/samsung-ks7000-u ... d-premium/
oraz ten odtwarzacz:
https://hdtvpolska.com/nastepca-formatu ... d-blu-ray/
Swoją drogą, pojawiła się już recka wydania UHDBD GofG vol2 - BD - 5 gwiazdek za obraz, UHDBD - 4,5 gwiazdek:
http://www.blu-ray.com/movies/Guardians ... ay/182005/The printed press release packed in with the screener copy of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 states that the digital version features HDR-10 or Dolby Vision; there's no indication that Dolby Vision is included on this disc but it at least leaves the door open for the possibility of future physical copy content from Disney with the new color enhancement format. Regardless, the standard 4K/HDR UHD, presented at 2160p and likely upscaled from its reported 2K digital intermediate (albeit from an 8K source and, per IMDB, Dolby Vision), marks a quality debut to the format for Disney. The boost in color is the most immediately notable quality over the standard Blu-ray. Color depth shows marked improvement. Yondu's blue skin may be the most immediately obvious beneficiary, but the film's broad-spectrum color palette, which includes an insanely diverse collection of both skin tones and outer space elements (various stars, starship engines, laser blasts, explosions, and so on) produce impressive vibrancy and accuracy even over the first-rate Blu-ray presentation. The image appears a notch darker, but that doesn't interfere with the sheer quality of the precisely nuanced palette. Details are firmer as well, though only by degrees, not leaps. The UHD reveals more tangible skin textures, particularly on Drax, while also revealing improved clothing lines and fabric textures. Surfaces areas, which are very diverse and range from ultra-clean and smooth to well worn and dirty, are all showcases for the heightened complexity. Back levels remain perfectly deep here, an area where other UHD discs tend to struggle. The boost in clarity does render the movie a bit more artificial-looking over the Blu-ray, a bit more naturally smooth and plastic-like in places, but once the eyes become accustomed to the presentation it becomes quite easy to appreciate the improvements. Disney has certainly come out of the gate strong.