Though the extreme demands of the HDR10 master metadata may contribute to why the Dolby Vision transfer, with its helpful extra scene by scene data, makes such a difference with this title. A high-end Samsung set I tried with the HDR10 master coped with it pretty well, delivering a much punchier and more dynamic image than the SDR image you get on the HD Blu-ray. These are some of the highest values I’ve seen, and may cause more than a few headaches for relatively underpowered HDR TVs. Yet according to the metadata reader on a Panasonic UB820 4K Blu-ray player, it deploys extremely high maximum brightness and maximum average frame light levels of 9978 and 614 nits respectively. The HDR10 master was apparently done on a 1000-nit monitor. I’d actually say that Dolby Vision delivers some of the most substantial gains I’ve seen to date on Far From Home for people with TVs and 4K Blu-ray players able to take advantage of it. Photo: Spider-Man: Far From Home, Columbia Pictures/Marvel/DisneyĪs usual, this Dolby Vision proves its worth in the form of enhanced dynamic range during dark scenes (the Mysterio ‘set up’ revelation sequence is particularly good at exposing this), and more color refinement throughout the film - especially during the exterior London and Venice sequences. Mysterio is brought to life superbly by Jake Gyllenhaal.
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