![]() Photo: Jumanji: The Next Level, Sony Picturesĭuring the Ostrich attack sequence, for instance, the CGI birds and, especially, some of the nearly 100% CGI shots of the desert stand out like a sore (or rather soft) thumb versus the detail and clarity of the more ‘real’ footage. Especially when she's playing Danny De Vito. There is, though, a problem with the disc’s often exceptional sharpness: It exposes the relative softness/low resolution of some of the film’s digital effects.Īwkwafina makes a fun addition to the Jumanji cast. Skin details, clothing texture, desert sand, Jumanji’s non-CGI flora and fauna all often look truly spectacular - far more granular, precise and textured than they do on the HD Blu-ray. For much of the time, though, you’d seriously struggle to tell.įine detail levels can look genuinely spectacular at times - especially during relatively static shots consisting predominantly of ‘live action’ rather than CGI elements. ![]() My guess, though, given the amount of digital effects elements it contains, would be that it got a 2K DI, making this 4K transfer an upscale. I haven’t been able to find out for sure if the film received a 2K or 4K digital intermediate (if anyone does find out, let me know via the Twitter account listed at the bottom of this article). ![]() While not quite as consistently stellar as the picture quality of Zombieland: Douple Tap and Charlie’s Angels, Jumanji: The Next Level’s transfer still regularly looks excellent. The IMAX Enhanced picture quality is actually be available to everyone - though officially only a few Sony TVs are certified as being good enough to reproduce the IMAX Enhanced pictures in all their glory. Photo: Jumanji: The Next Level, Sony Pictures ![]()
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