Lost Season 1 1080p Bluray X264 Dts Eng Spa Fre Extras Full !!top!! <REAL>
In a world moving toward 4K HDR streaming, Lost Season 1 remains trapped in a technical limbo—there is no official 4K remaster, and streaming versions are heavily compressed. Therefore, represents the absolute peak of what is currently possible.
Documenting how ABC greenlit the most expensive pilot episode in TV history ($10 to $14 million) before a script was even fully realized.
The Blu-ray set includes over eight hours of bonus features, mostly carried over from the DVD release, though some exclusive features are added: Amazon.com The Lost Flashbacks: Unseen flashbacks revealing new secrets Welcome to Oahu: Making of the Pilot: Behind-the-scenes featurette The Genesis of Lost: Creators discuss the show's conception Designing a Disaster: Insights into the look of the show Before They Were Lost: Audition tapes and personal stories Lost on Location: Insight into major episodes (sd) Deleted Scenes and Bloopers: Backstage with Drive Shaft: Short featurette Lost Book Club: Discusses literary parallels in the show Amazon.com Blu-ray Exclusive Features lost season 1 1080p bluray x264 dts eng spa fre extras full
What truly separates a standard television rip from a collector's archive is the inclusion of the "Extras." The Lost Season 1 BluRay box set was famous for its treasure trove of supplemental material. A "Full Extras" package preserves these rare pieces of media history, including:
What are your for archiving TV series?
The set contains all 25 episodes of the first season and over 8 hours of supplemental material. Amazon.com Audio Commentaries
Originally broadcast in standard definition, early DVD releases suffered from poor clarity and color issues. The Blu-ray release fixes these errors. It presents the full season in its original aspect ratio of (1920x1080 pixels). In a world moving toward 4K HDR streaming,
At 1080p, a well-encoded x264 file preserves the natural film grain of Lost (which was shot on 35mm film) beautifully, avoiding the "waxy," overly smoothed look sometimes found in aggressive x265 encodes. 3. DTS (Digital Theater Systems)