I agree having it in ur hand is better because u can watch it when u want and it can't be taken down. I only watch streaming stuff when. It's things like Stanger things type stuff.. or a show that's on something I don't stream on or to see if I want to watch. A newer movie that's in theaters. That's it. Again the actual movie or show is better again u can hold it there extra ls streaming doesn't that. And also if it's on streaming they can change and take things out however they want
im 30 years old, ever since i remember buying music or movies i have a rule, i buy what i know and the rest i'll stream and then if i like it i buy it!
Aside from watching the movie, one of my favorite things to do is go through my collection looking for my next movie to watch. Reminds me of the Blockbuster Video days.
Same i miss that experience of not just the rental store but even at home as a kid being able to pick a movie off the shelf to watch. I want to recreate that experience for myself and my family.
@@youtubesucks8340yep. If web goes down or provider removes film or goes out of business you own a physical copy. I like streaming for convenience but for a favourite film the quality of blu-ray plus the extra features is a plus. Prime tells you the file size I’m not sure what the clip means I don’t have Netflix I guess they don’t show file size?
I started collecting movies on VHS around 1992, accumulating a few hundred before switching over to DVDs in 1998. Currently, I've amassed a collection of DVDs, Blu Rays & 4Ks approaching 13,000. Half of those have come in the last 10 years due to thrift store, yard sale, etc. pickups ($1 - 5). I'll always prefer the tangible experience of physical ownership and the premium audio-visual quality that a disc provides compared to streaming ( which, of course, requires an internet connection -- a key point you missed making, Jeff ). Many people in the country do not have access to high-speed internet, even in 2024!!
You have 13,000 movies? Where are you storing them all? That's WAY too many movies, and I bet most of them are upgrades of the same movie titles! There is no possible way that you can watch all of those movies. Not in a million years! The most movies that I've had was 1,800 and I had to sell some of them, not because I needed the money, it was because it was just too many movies. I know we all have hobbies that we enjoy investing in but as I got older, I've become more selective.
@@Anonymous-wb3nz It actually isn't my problem. But not everyone has the money to spend 100s of dollars on movies every month. You are the one that needs to grow up. Movies ain't life bro.
I know that feeling! I can be notoriously slow when it comes to picking a movie and I can spend a good 20-30 minutes scrolling Netflix or Prime Video and just not be able to find anything...
@@nickwest932 Collecting is super fun. It's a hobby of mine I started in the mid 90's (yes I am that old). Still have the first movie I ever purchased with my own earned money. Stargate. DVD is so old you have to flip the disc in the middle of the movie. LOVE IT. Reach out if you ever want to dialogue about collecting.
@MikeSmith-rh5gc That is a respectable collection, though. I just bought bulk in the beginning and weeded out the doubles and stuff I didn't want. I have been upgrading my lower quality titles the past year, so I the number has been stagnant for a while.
lol cool I just counted my collection I have about 304 movies including shows on Blu Ray and 4K. Two big shelves of movie so nice to look at. Sometimes I have to dust the cases lol but I love the fact I can just pull out a movie whenever and watch it with the best sound and quality.
@@ryans413 Being a movie collector is not about the quantity of movies, it's the quality of good movies. You don't want to get into the habit of buying anything just to build your collection because, you'll end up with a bunch of bad movies, that you'll regret buying. You want to buy good movies.
Physical media just feels much more intentional overall. I have fun with the blind buys, showing people my favorites in the best quality, and selecting as you said. Much better than when I was trying to find what I was looking for on multiple apps or scrolling on one forever without watching anything.
This is one of your very best videos imo because the commentary was more in-depth and covered all the bases I believe on this topic. Just excellent overview and advice, thanks.
Disc : I am the Owner Disc : I can lead Disc : I can sell Disc : I have the best quality and audio Disc : I have no subscription Disc : I have no ads Disc : I have original movie and no problem with censorship Disc : I can watch the movie when I want Disc : no streaming giant can delete my movie Disc : I can watch my movie unlimited Disc : I have a nice box with a lot of extras Disc : I have no problem with internet. Slowdown or any limitation Can you do that with streaming ?
PHYSICAL FOREVER!! Something your feel you should have addressed with streaming, is how much more often we’re seeing streaming companies and studio’s starting to edit some of those movies because of how times have changed and they want to be more sensitive to an audience. As instead with physical, we can get the same movie we saw it as intended without crazy editing to the movie. I can’t say it’s never happened on a home video release. But more lately streaming is more of the culprit when edits happen in the movies as far we’ve seen today. Just a thought. Great video still 👍🏼
For 8 years I've been streaming movies and buying digital movies because of convenience. I tried a Blu-ray disc for the first time and I was blown away by the quality. Even the sound quality is much better.
I do both for my various reasons. The one thing that keeps left out of the streaming conversation a lot is the buying of digital movies. I have some streaming services for watching some shows but I buy my movies on Apple. Yes, still streaming but I ‘own’ those as such. With extras etc. There is no removing of those in that case.
I've been a lifelong collector of physical media so have a large personal collection. I only subscribe to Streaming services now and then to watch new shows and movies. Over the years I have upgraded my favourite films to the next best format (VHS -> DVD -> Bluray -> 4K Bluray). I love having all my faves on hand without paying for Streaming just to watch them. Trying to find stuff to watch on Streaming is a nightmare unless you have a title in mind and it's available when you want to watch it. There's so much trash to be found on Streaming.
For my favorite movies, I still prefer physical media like Blu rays and DVDs, because I don’t have to worry about buffering and artifacts! And you got bonus features and more audio tracks. Streaming is only good for watching multiple movies like a rental, if you’re only going to watch those movies once and you binge watch shows. I prefer physical media because I own the movie and I can easily share my movies to friends and family!
Great video, I completely agree. 80%-90% of the content I watch is from streaming which I never need to own. However the other 10%-20% are for movies/tv shows etc I need on disc. Having both the choice of ownership and having to purchase physical media or stream is the most important to me. What baffles me is when I have to explain why physical media is important and should be retained to people my age or older who grew up on owning our films on VHS and DVD.
Great video and well balanced Jeff! Was covered very briefly but not everyone has the space in their home to build a physical media collection, especially if you live in shared accomodation, live in a flat, have kids, etc. Also, something else you briefly touched on but i think it was worth making more of a thing of. You never really own anything digital. Content moves around from service to service and even if you "bought" a film say on Apple TV, there's nothing stopping them removing that film in a few years. Although I doubt that actually happens much.
I've been collecting DVDs and Blu-Rays since I was a kid, and it always has been part of my childhood. Physical media is the best way to watch my favorite movies and shows. I have every available season of The Simpsons on DVD, and I'm enjoying every minute of them, all the extras, deleted scenes, easter eggs, and the commentaries are just amazing. Disney Plus doesn't have any of them which is a bummer.
Jeff Rauseo, my first time visiting your site. I'm impressed! You are very easy to understand and most important - you give a very thorough explanation on the tech and services you are describing! Thank you 🙂
I still love the DVD and it's my favorite format. DVDs have better menus than blu ray. DVDs play right where you left off in the movie unlike a lot Blu Ray, some of the older DVDs have auto play feature on them, and have more special features than the blu ray.
The lossless audio on the Physical media of you have a good setup is next level. I have Nakaimichi shockwafe SSE Earc 9.2.4 1300 watts When playing on UHD Blueray with atmos lossless or DTS X it's next level.. Although Taylor Swift Eras tour did sound incredible on my Nakaimichi shockwafe SSE Earc and even much better on my Nakaimichi dragon 11.4.6 in my basement
1:44 most 4K blu rays are just over 100GB in size not 50GB. I'm not saying the video isn't compressed with 109GB but it's less compressed compared to a single layer 50GB disc.
Thank you for shouting out Kanopy. Such a great channel and completely free with some wonderful titles that are difficult to find anywhere else. The biggest benefit I find, and why I collect physical media, is the bonus features. I love learning more about films I Love. It boggles my mind that movies are released on BluRay, etc with no special features. A media label needs to snap up “Challengers” quickly.
Great video, Jeff! Physical media all the way for me; I know I'm in the minority here, but I've never been impressed with any streaming service. Not to mention, I already don't have enough time for all the movies I do have. Lately, I've been spending at least $50-60 a week on new awesome titles! It is such a good time to be a movie collector, there is so much great stuff dropping weekly. Next week is a real killer with: Blue Velvet, South Park, Monkey Man, and Purple Rain all hitting 4K. 😎
I've always love watching on 4K Blu-ray discs over streaming any day. I mean sure it is convenient if you have a better internet network on your phone or even at home. Not every movies or TV shows on streaming services.
I love this kind of video, Jeff! Good work, for sure! I definitely do both streaming and purchasing of physical media. I often use the theater and or streaming as a test run to see whether I like something enough to purchase a physical copy of it.
Wow, what a terrific video! Smart and reasoned arguments paired with a succinct and cogent presentation. (Ever thought about running for president?) I I’ll definitely be subscribing to this channel. Happy to have come across it. Thanks for your good work. D-
The only time I pick streaming is if it’s the only way to watch something I want to see, or if I want to preview something that I’m on the fence about buying. I recently watched Hit Man on Netflix, and the picture quality was so bad that it distracted me from enjoying the movie. Great video Jeff, you summed everything up perfectly.
Am I the only one who loves the idea of putting a disc in, watching previews, and seeing the menus screen? It really brings me back to when I was a kid so I guess it could be nostalgia, but none the less there are no menu screens in streaming!
you can maybe make arguments on the visual side depending on the streaming service how both files are compressed bluray is usually better but not with audio i dont have the best equipment only a cheap soundbar in front of my tv but on streaming i have to turn volume up dialog is hard to make out on bluray i rarely have that problem the soundstage is bigger dialog is clear and easy to understand
Hey Jeff, you forgot your local library in the cost analysis. My library can be a great resource of material (DVD) which you can't find and if you can get past DVD resolution actually looks better than streaming in some cases 😅
Totally! Libraries are awesome for stuff on DVD and Blu-ray. I’ve watched so many movies and some shows this way. Sound quality even on DVD is usually better and more consistent than on streaming 😃
My question is a little different, but here it goes. Do you think keeping a movie in its plastic casing versus opened but still mint condition affects its future value? For example, some steelbook movies.
In my experience, there's no wrong answer and it's OK to have both. For me, streaming is more convenient most of the time, but not everything is on there, it requires internet access, plus if the streaming site doesn't outright own the film, it gets delisted the second contracts expire. On the other hand, there's DVD/Blu-Ray/4K/whatever, which is there forever if the disc doesn't break, but you're essentially paying per disc, not counting replacements if one gets severely scratched or rots, plus the price can potentially be more expensive than than a streaming subscription or a simple rental fee... It's a complicated subject. I see pros and cons to both, I think both are valid options, but it's still nice to have a choice. I like having something on the shelf, even just looking at the DVD shelf, it's nice to see a film I enjoy, but at the same time, I don't mind just watching on Prime Video or D+ or Netflix if what I'm after is there... Like I said, pros and cons to both.
When I finally upgraded my tv back in 2021 to a LG 70 in 4K tv that was on the lowered and bought my panasonic 4k player I was blown away by the image quality. Some months later I invested in a Vizio sound bar with a sub and have enjoyed my 4K movies ever since. I just bought The Matrix, The Crow, Joker, and 2001: Space odessy to join my decent 4k + bluray collection and they will arrive june 25th 2024. Do I stream, Yes, do i buy digital movies, yes. I do mainly for films im on the fence on.
Hey Jeff, What is your opinion on watching older films (1970s or older) on UA-cam for free that may or may not have a physical media release? The copy right holders don’t seem to care that it’s on UA-cam and it’s so old that I wouldn’t think it affects new releases. I am considering watching those when I can and using my money on newer films.
Even the early Blu Rays from like 2006 look better then streaming. There 3 video Codex that Blu Ray uses MPEG-2 that’s the early Blu Rays more of the DVD source just up in bite rate quality. Then there’s VC-1 and then AVC. The AVC looks the best. DVDs used MPEG really compressed but some DVDs are looking better then streaming.
I have never watched a Blu-ray before. Is there a difference between it and Netflix? What kind of image will I get if I project it onto a projector and watch it? Which one is better quality?
YOOOO Jeff. I sincerely respect and appreciate you for the knowledge that you give and I’ve seen your collection of DVD’s and I had a good bit of discs UNTIL lol I got married and my wife and I have 3 kids, so I had to purchase all my media on Apple or vudu and I now download all my purchases to a external hard drive(it’s in 1080p) though so I have to take that into consideration lol, but when we get a home I will have a separate room for those 4K HDR disks and upgraded tv lol. Thank you for what you do
I use both, depending on what I'm watching and what I want to keep. I think that's a good place to at last start from: do I REALLY need this on my shelf? How many times will I ACTUALLY watch it? I think people will be surprised by the answer, unless you quite literally go through your entire collection in a cycle watching movies on disc every single day.
I had cutthroat Island in DVD and couldn't find it on 4K but the Blu-ray just pops after watching the DVD so much. And I don't see much difference between some blu-rays of the same movie in the 4K version. One I noticed was battleship big difference between the Blu-ray and the 4K visually. And also I have a 50 inch or 49 inch screen nano cell technology not bad but I'm hoping to get a OLED one day, 65 inch or better. I have a surround sound with JBL floor speakers 12 inch woofers two 10-inch subwoofers and two satellite rear speakers.. hooked up to a 400 watt 5 channel Sony.
Hey Jeff, I feel that streaming is best when you are traveling and can't take your physical media discs with you if you have so many. But in your home you have better access to your discs. Most people have big flat screen TV's and blu-ray and 4k blu-ray is best for in the home on a screen like that. Besides, streaming is the easiest way to take a lot of movies with you without having a ton of discs or a big disc player. And most people use a cell phone or tablet to watch streaming media on. And the quality of streaming looks plenty good for a screen that small.
Streaming: lower video bit-rates and more compression lossy (non-lossless) audio quality usually no extras no ownership could be censored could be an older master could be the wrong aspect ratio Could be deleted on a whim as its a subscription service Sometimes watermarked Often cuts out exactly when end credits begin (no toggle on/off option in user settings) subtitles look worse on streaming (usually less visually appealing and with borders or lines around or behind the subtitles, blocking part of the video/image) Physical media (Blu-ray/4K): Close to uncompressed video quality, best video presentation at home achievable Lossless audio (theater quality audio) Bonus features No censorship Available whenever you want You own it - you can keep it as you like or sell it as you like, it's up to you - it's not just a digital file that can disappear Physical and tangible experience (nice collectables, too)
The cost is an interesting topic of discussion. Say you spend £50 a month on streaming services, yes you have access to thousands of films. But there is only so many you can watch every month, then it's the next month and another £50. Some months you may not get round to watching anything at all but you still pay the subscriptions. Of course you need a disc player to watch discs but that is a one time purchase. And when you buy a disc, watching it becomes more of an event but you've chosen that particular film to buy. I'm not saying physical is cheaper, but i am saying there's a bit more to it than most people think.
I do own a good amount of movies on DVD and (4k) Bluray and I also stream. One thing that happened to me the other when streaming Ad Astra on Disney+. At some point, after 80 minutes or so, the video started to lag and at first I thought it was a feature, since it was at a moment it could fit, but when I realized it wasn't ment to be, I felt frustrated. I'm not a fan of pausing movies. It threw me out of the movie and at first I paused it for a bit, hoping it'll resolve. In the end I had to restart Disney+, which is more difficult than you would hope.
I just bought a portable blu ray player (i've only been living with a dvd player for years) that i can hook up to my tv when i want to. but it won't play 4k. do you think i should buy a 4k player? or just wait until i find a good deal on a 4k player one day?
4k bluray 4k tvs waste of money 1080p blurays with 1080p tvs Now we're talking the full hd resolution is so much better than garbage 4k resolution Anyone who upgrades their televisions into 4k and buys 4k physical media is a complete moron 1080p discs Is way better than garbage 4k discs
So I get what you’re saying… 4K disc is better than 4k streaming because it’s not compressed.. But recently, I wondered what is better to purchase for quality? Some movies only come out on Blu Ray but you can purchase the streaming in 4K. So what is better Blu Ray physical or 4k streaming?
It’s a good question. Usually I would still like the Bluray but the 4K digital purchases are better than streaming. So if you actually buy it and aren’t streaming, it’s probably better, at least color wise. But the quality on the Blu-ray is still better, being a 30-50 GB file
I am a physical media guy, but I like to view streaming like going to the video store. I use them to watch a movie for the first time. I usually only keep a streaming service for a few months at a time, when I am actively using it.
Given that many services are now forcing ads and charging more for higher def versions, I only bother with low investment "content" on streaming. When I want a proper experience I stick with physical.
I just started collecting 4Ks and I'm wondering if it's worth creating my own Plex/Media server. Essentially would create my own netflix but with my own personal collection. Though I'm not sure my use case at the moment is worth it.
I am both, I like to own physical media to preserve and I love to watch streaming knowing that I have a physical copy just in case (I may not have all of the shows and movies and video games but it is enough for me)
when you buy a movie on disc you are getting the features that you don't get on streaming services too. maybe at some point you could talk about that such as the making audio commentary behind the scenes and more some movies even have documentaries on them more of the movie that you wouldn't get on streaming services for example the Great Escape has the move but you all so get a documentary and maybe mention some of the titles that have great features so paying more in my opinion you get the extra that you pay for
I have a 65 inch hi sense 4k tv with hdr and a ps5. Some of the 4ks disc I buy are so so dark. Terminator dark fate was almost unwatchable. Ready player one also seemed very dark.
I do both. The problem with physical media though is where to store them. I have a dozen DVD/Blu-Ray/CD racks in my home and have run out of room, so most purchases of Music/TV/Movies are now via streaming services like Vudu, iTunes, and Amazon. Just don't have room for this content any longer.
For most movies visually I can't tell a huge difference. Like you say it's the dark scenes, where things start going south, but audio is very noticeable. The subs hit harder, the dialog is more crisp and clear and the overhead atmos speakers really come alive on a disc. Streaming audio needs to step the game.
I usually stream a movie and if I like it I'll buy it on DVD/Blu-Ray/4K and sometimes a movie on Netflix or something else might only be streaming only
I love me some round optical discs. Something that has always annoyed me about streaming is all the color banding. I most often notice that crap during a dark scene where you get this wavy gradient of grays and blacks.
With physical media you can watch the credits of a film without being flipped to see a fucking advert for some other shit. It's so disrespectful to the creators to do that
Most likely the Blu-ray will appear sharper and more details will be visible, but if you love HDR, then the stream will probably be more enjoyable to you.
So what’s better between 4K digital vs 1080p blu ray disc? There are some movies that are offered digitally on 4K and only have a blu ray disc. I have a UB820 so am I better off getting the 4K digital version on Apple in that case or should I buy the 1080p blu ray?
Also, sound quality is by far better even on a 1080p Blu-ray, no contest. Sound quality is something that’s obvious right away even if video quality is not.
I do a hybrid approach. I buy my all time favorites on 4K. But other movies I buy on Apple TV when they go on sale for $4.99. I don't pay for any monthly streamers. I like movies way more than shows and this has balanced experience and cost for me recognizing they trade offs.
I don’t use streaming unless it’s exclusively or some movie that won’t go on disc. I’ve gotten back into buying physically heavy now I’m getting about 30 4k disc per month but some are expensive like 50$ to 35$
I've always been a physical media collector. I like to own my favourite films and TV show. 4Ks are rather expensive, so I prioritize for sure. My collection is a personal one that reflects my taste. I currently have about 70 4Ks, 200 Blu-rays, and 100 odd DVDs. But I still have access to Netflix, Prime, Disney+, NOWTV, and Paramount+, at the moment of writing this. I have no issue with streaming. Physical media is for those of us more serious about film, which is fine.
I'll buy used 4k to add to my collection on the cheap for the future, but I won't buy physical until a movie on disc goes on sale or digital costs the same as physical. A Disney movie is the best example for this. Often times digital movies from Disney will go for 9.99 while they are on sale. I will only buy it on digital of the Sale price drops to around $5 or $6 digital and I want it to be 4k too. Otherwise I wait for the 4k + blueray + digital combo for around $10 to $13. I will definitely pickup physical combos for under $10 when they go on sale.
A few reasons why I prefer discs over streaming. 1) some shows / movies are being edited / removed 2) for some more lengthy shows it’s cheaper to buy the boxset then to stay subscribed until that show I fully watched. I don’t have every day to watch movies / series so it adds up.
Quick word: Even though you are technically correct with the notes mentioned in the video (compressed vs. uncompressed), the type of entirely uncompressed data discussed (1.2 terabytes or so) files delivered to cinemas, you are talking about fully uncompressed data for premium screens such as Cinemark XD, Dolby Cinema, etc. The 4K UHD disc format retains close to 99.9% realistic data even with compression (based on analysis and graphs I have seen), so it's as close to "uncompressed video" for home entertainment as one can expect. Even though a fully "uncompressed video" format could theoretically exist someday it's unlikely to given the market statistics. I just want to add this to the streaming vs. physical media debate because the physical format is the closest to uncompressed/best quality one can get at home. And, of course, the lossless audio on disc - it is theater quality audio (the same audio master quality as one gets in a cinema). Audio is completely lossless on Blu-ray/4K releases, exactly as the movie theater gets, so that's the biggest advantage over streaming.
4k bluray 4k tvs waste of money 1080p blurays with 1080p tvs Now we're talking the full hd resolution is so much better than garbage 4k resolution Anyone who upgrades their televisions into 4k and buys 4k physical media is a complete moron 1080p discs Is way better than garbage 4k discs
I sold my collection a couple of years ago because I just don’t sit and watch movies like I used to in college. I play video games more. But I am still pro disc and love finding second hand games at flea markets and retro game stores. But I do like digital for its convenience and steam sales or PS or Xbox sales are nice too but like when it comes to movies like I said, I just don’t watch them a lot so streaming works for me but I do think physical should be an option for people to have their favorite movies on hand.
There are 2 UK UA-camrs who project 4K in 4K and review it. They are Movie Collector and Double Bill Movies. The latter, Trevor, used to master Blu Rays professionally whilst the former, John, is “Mr film format” and has extensive knowledge of physical media quality. Highly recommended channels.
I liked streaming when it first came out but soon realised I was just paying for the same content I already had on DVD with just a few extra new shows.
1: Blu ray/physical 2: Sony Pictures Core app (Bravia tvs only) streaming (brilliant!) 3: Apple TV 4K streaming (pretty great/decent but not as good as 1&2) I’m a bit hard of hearing so it’s quite a healthy mix but Atmos & equivalents really do it for me ( but I’ve got Blu rays with Dolby 2.0 from films made in the 60s that sound great & 5.1 streamers that sound awful!!
There is no high speed internet in my area (rural Maryland) so there isn't even a choice to be made. Streaming isn't an option. I have to watch youtube at its lowest setting (144p, the size of a postage stamp) and it still buffers like crazy.
I agree physical media is best. For movies I like the most I buy 4K unless the 4K transfer shows little difference or in some rare cases ain’t as good as the blu ray version. But blu ray and 4 K is by far the best especially on my 120” screen.
I just want to comment on your laziness point. I'm Gen X, so grew up when physical media was the only option, so physical media also holds a nostalgia element. Whilst I agree we have become lazier, myself included, I feel that getting up to pick a movie/s to watch is just part of the experience. I've also found that I've gone to get a movie to watch, and when I get to the collection, I've found something else I'd prefer to watch, or I may decide to get several movies and just binge them. I did this recently with the 4 MiB movies.
Get $15 in FREE credit when you join me on Whatnot: whatnot.com/invite/jeffrauseo
This is off topic but can you review the Star Wars Prequels on 4K. I know they are 2K upscales but I would like to hear your opinion. Thank you!
I'll take my 4K Discs and Blu Ray over streaming any day. I wanna hear commentary and see a perfect picture without relying on bandwidth.
ur not gonna see a perfect picture.
I agree having it in ur hand is better because u can watch it when u want and it can't be taken down. I only watch streaming stuff when. It's things like Stanger things type stuff.. or a show that's on something I don't stream on or to see if I want to watch. A newer movie that's in theaters. That's it. Again the actual movie or show is better again u can hold it there extra ls streaming doesn't that. And also if it's on streaming they can change and take things out however they want
@@luketilley6561Blu-ray disc and 4k disc are just the better way to experience a movie in terms of quality and sound of the movie period
@@jbowDonDiego1380 I stream most movies to find out if they are worth owning on physical media.
@@luketilley6561compared to streaming yes you are 😂
im 30 years old, ever since i remember buying music or movies i have a rule, i buy what i know and the rest i'll stream and then if i like it i buy it!
Same here, but I pirate instead of streaming first 😂
@Imbatmn57Mind if I ask, do you think 3 bundled Blu-ray for 25 bucks is a fair price?
I do the exact same thing, blind buys are to risky for me lol
That is an excellent rule! Good for you. I am very similar.
@@querimoniouslimner8081 3 bundled blu ray for that price is really good lol
Aside from watching the movie, one of my favorite things to do is go through my collection looking for my next movie to watch. Reminds me of the Blockbuster Video days.
Perfectly said my friend and I feel the exact same way
Full disclosure...once upon a time I was a Blockbuster store manager. Good times.
Same i miss that experience of not just the rental store but even at home as a kid being able to pick a movie off the shelf to watch. I want to recreate that experience for myself and my family.
@@roqueadeleon That is a really cool goal. My best to you.
I agree
I prefer physical but I’m not going to deprive myself of a great movie just because it’s streaming only.
Remember folks it’s about seeing the movie.
Exactly this ☝️
Partly true imo, it’s about owning the product
@@youtubesucks8340yep. If web goes down or provider removes film or goes out of business you own a physical copy. I like streaming for convenience but for a favourite film the quality of blu-ray plus the extra features is a plus. Prime tells you the file size I’m not sure what the clip means I don’t have Netflix I guess they don’t show file size?
I started collecting movies on VHS around 1992, accumulating a few hundred before switching over to DVDs in 1998. Currently, I've amassed a collection of DVDs, Blu Rays & 4Ks approaching 13,000. Half of those have come in the last 10 years due to thrift store, yard sale, etc. pickups ($1 - 5). I'll always prefer the tangible experience of physical ownership and the premium audio-visual quality that a disc provides compared to streaming ( which, of course, requires an internet connection -- a key point you missed making, Jeff ). Many people in the country do not have access to high-speed internet, even in 2024!!
You have 13,000 movies? Where are you storing them all? That's WAY too many movies, and I bet most of them are upgrades of the same movie titles! There is no possible way that you can watch all of those movies. Not in a million years! The most movies that I've had was 1,800 and I had to sell some of them, not because I needed the money, it was because it was just too many movies. I know we all have hobbies that we enjoy investing in but as I got older, I've become more selective.
@@slimdude2011grow up.
not many people are wealthy and can purchase $20 of a single movie.
@@ben99ny69 that's your problem. Grow up.
@@Anonymous-wb3nz It actually isn't my problem. But not everyone has the money to spend 100s of dollars on movies every month.
You are the one that needs to grow up. Movies ain't life bro.
Never thought about how scrolling through a streaming service takes longer for me, than getting up and putting a disc in 😆
It totally does though!
I know that feeling! I can be notoriously slow when it comes to picking a movie and I can spend a good 20-30 minutes scrolling Netflix or Prime Video and just not be able to find anything...
HEY!!! I have over 3000+ movies! It's pure joy!
I'm getting there. I got over $2k invested and sitting at 1,600 titles. A lot are TV shows, serials, and mini-series, though.
@@nickwest932 Collecting is super fun. It's a hobby of mine I started in the mid 90's (yes I am that old). Still have the first movie I ever purchased with my own earned money. Stargate. DVD is so old you have to flip the disc in the middle of the movie. LOVE IT. Reach out if you ever want to dialogue about collecting.
I thought I was something at 300.
Dang
@@MikeSmith-rh5gc It's just a number Mike. I have been collecting for 30 years. It's my hobby. Enjoy your collection and have a great weekend.
@MikeSmith-rh5gc
That is a respectable collection, though. I just bought bulk in the beginning and weeded out the doubles and stuff I didn't want. I have been upgrading my lower quality titles the past year, so I the number has been stagnant for a while.
Streaming is rarely better, unless the master is different, physical is always better thanks to the bitrate.
Started collecting b-rays and dvds in december 2023. Today I have 300 movies in my collection and I will not stop collecting
lol cool I just counted my collection I have about 304 movies including shows on Blu Ray and 4K. Two big shelves of movie so nice to look at. Sometimes I have to dust the cases lol but I love the fact I can just pull out a movie whenever and watch it with the best sound and quality.
@@ryans413 Being a movie collector is not about the quantity of movies, it's the quality of good movies. You don't want to get into the habit of buying anything just to build your collection because, you'll end up with a bunch of bad movies, that you'll regret buying. You want to buy good movies.
Physical media just feels much more intentional overall. I have fun with the blind buys, showing people my favorites in the best quality, and selecting as you said. Much better than when I was trying to find what I was looking for on multiple apps or scrolling on one forever without watching anything.
This is one of your very best videos imo because the commentary was more in-depth and covered all the bases I believe on this topic. Just excellent overview and advice, thanks.
Disc : I am the Owner
Disc : I can lead
Disc : I can sell
Disc : I have the best quality and audio
Disc : I have no subscription
Disc : I have no ads
Disc : I have original movie and no problem with censorship
Disc : I can watch the movie when I want
Disc : no streaming giant can delete my movie
Disc : I can watch my movie unlimited
Disc : I have a nice box with a lot of extras
Disc : I have no problem with internet. Slowdown or any limitation
Can you do that with streaming ?
Yup I bought a bunch of the old twilight zone episodes on Apple TV a few years back, some of them disappeared outta my digital library .
PHYSICAL FOREVER!! Something your feel you should have addressed with streaming, is how much more often we’re seeing streaming companies and studio’s starting to edit some of those movies because of how times have changed and they want to be more sensitive to an audience. As instead with physical, we can get the same movie we saw it as intended without crazy editing to the movie. I can’t say it’s never happened on a home video release. But more lately streaming is more of the culprit when edits happen in the movies as far we’ve seen today. Just a thought. Great video still 👍🏼
For 8 years I've been streaming movies and buying digital movies because of convenience. I tried a Blu-ray disc for the first time and I was blown away by the quality. Even the sound quality is much better.
The most startling contrast I've seen was streaming Prey vs physical. I was completely shocked by how much more detail was present on the disc.
Having the room displayed is so great
I do both for my various reasons. The one thing that keeps left out of the streaming conversation a lot is the buying of digital movies. I have some streaming services for watching some shows but I buy my movies on Apple. Yes, still streaming but I ‘own’ those as such. With extras etc. There is no removing of those in that case.
I've been a lifelong collector of physical media so have a large personal collection. I only subscribe to Streaming services now and then to watch new shows and movies. Over the years I have upgraded my favourite films to the next best format (VHS -> DVD -> Bluray -> 4K Bluray). I love having all my faves on hand without paying for Streaming just to watch them.
Trying to find stuff to watch on Streaming is a nightmare unless you have a title in mind and it's available when you want to watch it. There's so much trash to be found on Streaming.
Watched Ford Vs Ferrari on Netflix loved it so much bought in on 4K Blu Ray and watched it again and it was like I was watching a brand new movie.
For my favorite movies, I still prefer physical media like Blu rays and DVDs, because I don’t have to worry about buffering and artifacts! And you got bonus features and more audio tracks. Streaming is only good for watching multiple movies like a rental, if you’re only going to watch those movies once and you binge watch shows. I prefer physical media because I own the movie and I can easily share my movies to friends and family!
Just started collecting like crazy. Record store in my area has thousands of blu rays for $1.99. I’ve been a bit out of control buying them up
Great topic to discuss.
Thank you Jeff.
Love your videos for being so easy to understand and do a fantastic job breaking down topics in a simplistic way!!
Just found and subd your channel on a search for a lot of these questions. Thank you sir. Looking forward to seeing more videos as well
Great video, I completely agree. 80%-90% of the content I watch is from streaming which I never need to own. However the other 10%-20% are for movies/tv shows etc I need on disc. Having both the choice of ownership and having to purchase physical media or stream is the most important to me. What baffles me is when I have to explain why physical media is important and should be retained to people my age or older who grew up on owning our films on VHS and DVD.
Great video and well balanced Jeff!
Was covered very briefly but not everyone has the space in their home to build a physical media collection, especially if you live in shared accomodation, live in a flat, have kids, etc.
Also, something else you briefly touched on but i think it was worth making more of a thing of. You never really own anything digital. Content moves around from service to service and even if you "bought" a film say on Apple TV, there's nothing stopping them removing that film in a few years. Although I doubt that actually happens much.
I've been collecting DVDs and Blu-Rays since I was a kid, and it always has been part of my childhood. Physical media is the best way to watch my favorite movies and shows. I have every available season of The Simpsons on DVD, and I'm enjoying every minute of them, all the extras, deleted scenes, easter eggs, and the commentaries are just amazing. Disney Plus doesn't have any of them which is a bummer.
Jeff Rauseo, my first time visiting your site. I'm impressed! You are very easy to understand and most important - you give a very thorough explanation on the tech and services you are describing! Thank you 🙂
I still love the DVD and it's my favorite format. DVDs have better menus than blu ray. DVDs play right where you left off in the movie unlike a lot Blu Ray, some of the older DVDs have auto play feature on them, and have more special features than the blu ray.
💪😎 I prefer 4k physical, mainly for Dolby Atmos
The lossless audio on the Physical media of you have a good setup is next level. I have Nakaimichi shockwafe SSE Earc 9.2.4 1300 watts
When playing on UHD Blueray with atmos lossless or DTS X it's next level.. Although Taylor Swift Eras tour did sound incredible on my Nakaimichi shockwafe SSE Earc and even much better on my Nakaimichi dragon 11.4.6 in my basement
Most people don’t have massive professional audio set ups
You don't have to get that deep, there are some great Atmos/DTS:X soundbars on the market. @@ronthorn3
@@ronthorn3 the nakamichi shockwave isn't professional audio 😂 it's a very expensive and very large soundbar system.
1:44 most 4K blu rays are just over 100GB in size not 50GB. I'm not saying the video isn't compressed with 109GB but it's less compressed compared to a single layer 50GB disc.
Thank you for shouting out Kanopy. Such a great channel and completely free with some wonderful titles that are difficult to find anywhere else. The biggest benefit I find, and why I collect physical media, is the bonus features. I love learning more about films I Love. It boggles my mind that movies are released on BluRay, etc with no special features. A media label needs to snap up “Challengers” quickly.
A big reason you may have overlooked is extended, directors cut and special editions. Not much hope of finding these on standard streaming platforms.
Great video, Jeff!
Physical media all the way for me; I know I'm in the minority here, but I've never been impressed with any streaming service. Not to mention, I already don't have enough time for all the movies I do have. Lately, I've been spending at least $50-60 a week on new awesome titles! It is such a good time to be a movie collector, there is so much great stuff dropping weekly. Next week is a real killer with: Blue Velvet, South Park, Monkey Man, and Purple Rain all hitting 4K. 😎
I've always love watching on 4K Blu-ray discs over streaming any day. I mean sure it is convenient if you have a better internet network on your phone or even at home. Not every movies or TV shows on streaming services.
I have no Internet so I’m a blu ray guy, and I hope so are my children in the future
But yet, you’re online on the internet?
You can have internet on your phone without having it at home🙃
@@jdx4174 thank you
@@jdx4174 So you you do have internet, just prefer blu-rays. Gotcha.
How are you watching UA-cam without internet? UA-cam is streamed via the internet.
I love this kind of video, Jeff! Good work, for sure! I definitely do both streaming and purchasing of physical media. I often use the theater and or streaming as a test run to see whether I like something enough to purchase a physical copy of it.
Very smart way testing out these movies before purchase ☝️
Wow, what a terrific video! Smart and reasoned arguments paired with a succinct and cogent presentation. (Ever thought about running for president?) I I’ll definitely be subscribing to this channel. Happy to have come across it. Thanks for your good work. D-
The only time I pick streaming is if it’s the only way to watch something I want to see, or if I want to preview something that I’m on the fence about buying. I recently watched Hit Man on Netflix, and the picture quality was so bad that it distracted me from enjoying the movie. Great video Jeff, you summed everything up perfectly.
Am I the only one who loves the idea of putting a disc in, watching previews, and seeing the menus screen? It really brings me back to when I was a kid so I guess it could be nostalgia, but none the less there are no menu screens in streaming!
will I notice the difference between UHD Dolby Vision netflix movie vs. the blu-ray version of it?
you can maybe make arguments on the visual side depending on the streaming service how both files are compressed bluray is usually better but not with audio i dont have the best equipment only a cheap soundbar in front of my tv but on streaming i have to turn volume up dialog is hard to make out on bluray i rarely have that problem the soundstage is bigger dialog is clear and easy to understand
Hey Jeff, you forgot your local library in the cost analysis. My library can be a great resource of material (DVD) which you can't find and if you can get past DVD resolution actually looks better than streaming in some cases 😅
Totally! Libraries are awesome for stuff on DVD and Blu-ray. I’ve watched so many movies and some shows this way. Sound quality even on DVD is usually better and more consistent than on streaming 😃
My question is a little different, but here it goes. Do you think keeping a movie in its plastic casing versus opened but still mint condition affects its future value? For example, some steelbook movies.
*Another well-timed, awesome video topic!!*
🤙🏽🤟🏽🤟🏽🤙🏽
Things have changed a little since the last time you covered the topic too 👌🏽
In my experience, there's no wrong answer and it's OK to have both. For me, streaming is more convenient most of the time, but not everything is on there, it requires internet access, plus if the streaming site doesn't outright own the film, it gets delisted the second contracts expire. On the other hand, there's DVD/Blu-Ray/4K/whatever, which is there forever if the disc doesn't break, but you're essentially paying per disc, not counting replacements if one gets severely scratched or rots, plus the price can potentially be more expensive than than a streaming subscription or a simple rental fee... It's a complicated subject. I see pros and cons to both, I think both are valid options, but it's still nice to have a choice. I like having something on the shelf, even just looking at the DVD shelf, it's nice to see a film I enjoy, but at the same time, I don't mind just watching on Prime Video or D+ or Netflix if what I'm after is there... Like I said, pros and cons to both.
When I finally upgraded my tv back in 2021 to a LG 70 in 4K tv that was on the lowered and bought my panasonic 4k player I was blown away by the image quality. Some months later I invested in a Vizio sound bar with a sub and have enjoyed my 4K movies ever since. I just bought The Matrix, The Crow, Joker, and 2001: Space odessy to join my decent 4k + bluray collection and they will arrive june 25th 2024. Do I stream, Yes, do i buy digital movies, yes. I do mainly for films im on the fence on.
Hey Jeff,
What is your opinion on watching older films (1970s or older) on UA-cam for free that may or may not have a physical media release?
The copy right holders don’t seem to care that it’s on UA-cam and it’s so old that I wouldn’t think it affects new releases. I am considering watching those when I can and using my money on newer films.
There is a HUGE quality difference, even with standard bluray. There really is no comparison. Physical is so much cleaner and has more detail.
Even the early Blu Rays from like 2006 look better then streaming. There 3 video Codex that Blu Ray uses MPEG-2 that’s the early Blu Rays more of the DVD source just up in bite rate quality. Then there’s VC-1 and then AVC. The AVC looks the best. DVDs used MPEG really compressed but some DVDs are looking better then streaming.
@@ryans413oh you definitely know your stuff
I have never watched a Blu-ray before. Is there a difference between it and Netflix? What kind of image will I get if I project it onto a projector and watch it? Which one is better quality?
YOOOO Jeff. I sincerely respect and appreciate you for the knowledge that you give and I’ve seen your collection of DVD’s and I had a good bit of discs UNTIL lol I got married and my wife and I have 3 kids, so I had to purchase all my media on Apple or vudu and I now download all my purchases to a external hard drive(it’s in 1080p) though so I have to take that into consideration lol, but when we get a home I will have a separate room for those 4K HDR disks and upgraded tv lol. Thank you for what you do
I use both, depending on what I'm watching and what I want to keep. I think that's a good place to at last start from: do I REALLY need this on my shelf? How many times will I ACTUALLY watch it? I think people will be surprised by the answer, unless you quite literally go through your entire collection in a cycle watching movies on disc every single day.
I had cutthroat Island in DVD and couldn't find it on 4K but the Blu-ray just pops after watching the DVD so much. And I don't see much difference between some blu-rays of the same movie in the 4K version. One I noticed was battleship big difference between the Blu-ray and the 4K visually. And also I have a 50 inch or 49 inch screen nano cell technology not bad but I'm hoping to get a OLED one day, 65 inch or better. I have a surround sound with JBL floor speakers 12 inch woofers two 10-inch subwoofers and two satellite rear speakers.. hooked up to a 400 watt 5 channel Sony.
Great vid... whatcha streaming on Apple TV+ ?
Hey Jeff, I feel that streaming is best when you are traveling and can't take your physical media discs with you if you have so many. But in your home you have better access to your discs. Most people have big flat screen TV's and blu-ray and 4k blu-ray is best for in the home on a screen like that. Besides, streaming is the easiest way to take a lot of movies with you without having a ton of discs or a big disc player. And most people use a cell phone or tablet to watch streaming media on. And the quality of streaming looks plenty good for a screen that small.
Awesome Vid!
Thank You very much for Your Work! Greetings from Germany
Hi Jeff, can you tell me why some of my 4k disc are failing meaning they can’t be read by players and these are relatively new releases
Streaming:
lower video bit-rates and more compression
lossy (non-lossless) audio quality
usually no extras
no ownership
could be censored
could be an older master
could be the wrong aspect ratio
Could be deleted on a whim as its a subscription service
Sometimes watermarked
Often cuts out exactly when end credits begin (no toggle on/off option in user settings)
subtitles look worse on streaming (usually less visually appealing and with borders or lines around or behind the subtitles, blocking part of the video/image)
Physical media (Blu-ray/4K):
Close to uncompressed video quality, best video presentation at home achievable
Lossless audio (theater quality audio)
Bonus features
No censorship
Available whenever you want
You own it - you can keep it as you like or sell it as you like, it's up to you - it's not just a digital file that can disappear
Physical and tangible experience (nice collectables, too)
The cost is an interesting topic of discussion.
Say you spend £50 a month on streaming services, yes you have access to thousands of films.
But there is only so many you can watch every month, then it's the next month and another £50.
Some months you may not get round to watching anything at all but you still pay the subscriptions.
Of course you need a disc player to watch discs but that is a one time purchase.
And when you buy a disc, watching it becomes more of an event but you've chosen that particular film to buy.
I'm not saying physical is cheaper, but i am saying there's a bit more to it than most people think.
Great video. Well said. I do both. Running out of room though as i have more than 5000 discs!
I use both. These days I tend to collect those movies that benefit from being on 4K UHD disc or content I really love to revisit more often.
I do own a good amount of movies on DVD and (4k) Bluray and I also stream. One thing that happened to me the other when streaming Ad Astra on Disney+. At some point, after 80 minutes or so, the video started to lag and at first I thought it was a feature, since it was at a moment it could fit, but when I realized it wasn't ment to be, I felt frustrated. I'm not a fan of pausing movies. It threw me out of the movie and at first I paused it for a bit, hoping it'll resolve. In the end I had to restart Disney+, which is more difficult than you would hope.
I just bought a portable blu ray player (i've only been living with a dvd player for years) that i can hook up to my tv when i want to. but it won't play 4k. do you think i should buy a 4k player? or just wait until i find a good deal on a 4k player one day?
4k bluray 4k tvs waste of money
1080p blurays with 1080p tvs Now we're talking the full hd resolution is so much better than garbage 4k resolution Anyone who upgrades their televisions into 4k and buys 4k physical media is a complete moron 1080p discs Is way better than garbage 4k discs
So I get what you’re saying… 4K disc is better than 4k streaming because it’s not compressed..
But recently, I wondered what is better to purchase for quality? Some movies only come out on Blu Ray but you can purchase the streaming in 4K. So what is better Blu Ray physical or 4k streaming?
It’s a good question. Usually I would still like the Bluray but the 4K digital purchases are better than streaming. So if you actually buy it and aren’t streaming, it’s probably better, at least color wise. But the quality on the Blu-ray is still better, being a 30-50 GB file
I am a physical media guy, but I like to view streaming like going to the video store. I use them to watch a movie for the first time. I usually only keep a streaming service for a few months at a time, when I am actively using it.
Given that many services are now forcing ads and charging more for higher def versions, I only bother with low investment "content" on streaming. When I want a proper experience I stick with physical.
Any idea why my vudu movie occasionally look better than the discs? I do have really fast internet but still...just wondering.
Most movies i have on Blu Ray are not on any streaming platform yet 🤷♂️
I just started collecting 4Ks and I'm wondering if it's worth creating my own Plex/Media server. Essentially would create my own netflix but with my own personal collection. Though I'm not sure my use case at the moment is worth it.
I am both, I like to own physical media to preserve and I love to watch streaming knowing that I have a physical copy just in case (I may not have all of the shows and movies and video games but it is enough for me)
when you buy a movie on disc you are getting the features that you don't get on streaming services too. maybe at some point you could talk about that such as the making audio commentary behind the scenes and more some movies even have documentaries on them more of the movie that you wouldn't get on streaming services for example the Great Escape has the move but you all so get a documentary and maybe mention some of the titles that have great features so paying more in my opinion you get the extra that you pay for
I have a 65 inch hi sense 4k tv with hdr and a ps5. Some of the 4ks disc I buy are so so dark. Terminator dark fate was almost unwatchable. Ready player one also seemed very dark.
I do both. The problem with physical media though is where to store them. I have a dozen DVD/Blu-Ray/CD racks in my home and have run out of room, so most purchases of Music/TV/Movies are now via streaming services like Vudu, iTunes, and Amazon. Just don't have room for this content any longer.
For most movies visually I can't tell a huge difference. Like you say it's the dark scenes, where things start going south, but audio is very noticeable. The subs hit harder, the dialog is more crisp and clear and the overhead atmos speakers really come alive on a disc. Streaming audio needs to step the game.
I usually stream a movie and if I like it I'll buy it on DVD/Blu-Ray/4K and sometimes a movie on Netflix or something else might only be streaming only
I love me some round optical discs. Something that has always annoyed me about streaming is all the color banding. I most often notice that crap during a dark scene where you get this wavy gradient of grays and blacks.
With physical media you can watch the credits of a film without being flipped to see a fucking advert for some other shit. It's so disrespectful to the creators to do that
What's better, between a 4k HDR stream vs. a standard 1080p Blu-ray?
Most likely the Blu-ray will appear sharper and more details will be visible, but if you love HDR, then the stream will probably be more enjoyable to you.
So what’s better between 4K digital vs 1080p blu ray disc? There are some movies that are offered digitally on 4K and only have a blu ray disc. I have a UB820 so am I better off getting the 4K digital version on Apple in that case or should I buy the 1080p blu ray?
1080p Blu-ray tends to appear clearer and more detailed. However, if you prefer HDR, then just save the money and get the digital 4K movie.
Also, sound quality is by far better even on a 1080p Blu-ray, no contest. Sound quality is something that’s obvious right away even if video quality is not.
I do a hybrid approach. I buy my all time favorites on 4K. But other movies I buy on Apple TV when they go on sale for $4.99. I don't pay for any monthly streamers. I like movies way more than shows and this has balanced experience and cost for me recognizing they trade offs.
I don’t use streaming unless it’s exclusively or some movie that won’t go on disc. I’ve gotten back into buying physically heavy now I’m getting about 30 4k disc per month but some are expensive like 50$ to 35$
I've always been a physical media collector. I like to own my favourite films and TV show. 4Ks are rather expensive, so I prioritize for sure. My collection is a personal one that reflects my taste. I currently have about 70 4Ks, 200 Blu-rays, and 100 odd DVDs. But I still have access to Netflix, Prime, Disney+, NOWTV, and Paramount+, at the moment of writing this. I have no issue with streaming. Physical media is for those of us more serious about film, which is fine.
Plasma TV with 1080p blu ray disc is the best.
Need to improve dialog on my center channel, both disc and streaming compress audio to much.
I'll buy used 4k to add to my collection on the cheap for the future, but I won't buy physical until a movie on disc goes on sale or digital costs the same as physical. A Disney movie is the best example for this. Often times digital movies from Disney will go for 9.99 while they are on sale. I will only buy it on digital of the Sale price drops to around $5 or $6 digital and I want it to be 4k too. Otherwise I wait for the 4k + blueray + digital combo for around $10 to $13. I will definitely pickup physical combos for under $10 when they go on sale.
Streaming services here in DK remaster a lot of movies only avaliable on their streaming.
iTunes is pretty damn good with a Apple TV box and a nice sound system.
A few reasons why I prefer discs over streaming.
1) some shows / movies are being edited / removed
2) for some more lengthy shows it’s cheaper to buy the boxset then to stay subscribed until that show I fully watched. I don’t have every day to watch movies / series so it adds up.
Its better bc streaming isn't 100% hd & 4k
Quick word:
Even though you are technically correct with the notes mentioned in the video (compressed vs. uncompressed), the type of entirely uncompressed data discussed (1.2 terabytes or so) files delivered to cinemas, you are talking about fully uncompressed data for premium screens such as Cinemark XD, Dolby Cinema, etc. The 4K UHD disc format retains close to 99.9% realistic data even with compression (based on analysis and graphs I have seen), so it's as close to "uncompressed video" for home entertainment as one can expect. Even though a fully "uncompressed video" format could theoretically exist someday it's unlikely to given the market statistics.
I just want to add this to the streaming vs. physical media debate because the physical format is the closest to uncompressed/best quality one can get at home.
And, of course, the lossless audio on disc - it is theater quality audio (the same audio master quality as one gets in a cinema). Audio is completely lossless on Blu-ray/4K releases, exactly as the movie theater gets, so that's the biggest advantage over streaming.
I have both but unfortunately it's becoming to expensive here in Canada to support 4k as they are normally $40 to $50 per 4k.
4k bluray 4k tvs waste of money
1080p blurays with 1080p tvs Now we're talking the full hd resolution is so much better than garbage 4k resolution Anyone who upgrades their televisions into 4k and buys 4k physical media is a complete moron 1080p discs Is way better than garbage 4k discs
@stonesfan2851080p tv is better
I sold my collection a couple of years ago because I just don’t sit and watch movies like I used to in college. I play video games more. But I am still pro disc and love finding second hand games at flea markets and retro game stores. But I do like digital for its convenience and steam sales or PS or Xbox sales are nice too but like when it comes to movies like I said, I just don’t watch them a lot so streaming works for me but I do think physical should be an option for people to have their favorite movies on hand.
Is HDX on Fandango anything different or just a fancy name?
HDX is just a fancy name. Nothing special. It’s just regular HD, except super compressed for streaming.
There are 2 UK UA-camrs who project 4K in 4K and review it. They are Movie Collector and Double Bill Movies. The latter, Trevor, used to master Blu Rays professionally whilst the former, John, is “Mr film format” and has extensive knowledge of physical media quality. Highly recommended channels.
I liked streaming when it first came out but soon realised I was just paying for the same content I already had on DVD with just a few extra new shows.
I like both streaming and physical media, I use streaming to watch the movies I do not own and the physical copies for both to watch and display
Hi Jeff. Have you seen the new Second Sight Limited Edition of The Borderlands? One of my favourite underrated British horrors. That ending....
1: Blu ray/physical
2: Sony Pictures Core app (Bravia tvs only) streaming (brilliant!)
3: Apple TV 4K streaming (pretty great/decent but not as good as 1&2)
I’m a bit hard of hearing so it’s quite a healthy mix but Atmos & equivalents really do it for me ( but I’ve got Blu rays with Dolby 2.0 from films made in the 60s that sound great & 5.1 streamers that sound awful!!
There is no high speed internet in my area (rural Maryland) so there isn't even a choice to be made. Streaming isn't an option.
I have to watch youtube at its lowest setting (144p, the size of a postage stamp) and it still buffers like crazy.
Tubi is great for older movies
I agree physical media is best. For movies I like the most I buy 4K unless the 4K transfer shows little difference or in some rare cases ain’t as good as the blu ray version. But blu ray and 4 K is by far the best especially on my 120” screen.
I just want to comment on your laziness point. I'm Gen X, so grew up when physical media was the only option, so physical media also holds a nostalgia element. Whilst I agree we have become lazier, myself included, I feel that getting up to pick a movie/s to watch is just part of the experience. I've also found that I've gone to get a movie to watch, and when I get to the collection, I've found something else I'd prefer to watch, or I may decide to get several movies and just binge them. I did this recently with the 4 MiB movies.