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Rolling Stones - Sticky Fingers Revisited Deluxe Edition 2012

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Streets of Fire (1984) Streets of Fire Blu-ray delivers great video and reference-quality audio in this exceptional Blu-ray release Rock and Roll singer is taken captive by a motorcycle gang in a strange world that seems to be a cross of the 1950's and the present or future. Her ex-boyfriend returns to town and to find her missing and goes to her rescue.

Fussball Manager 2005 Download Vollversion Kostenlos more. For more about Streets of Fire and the Streets of Fire Blu-ray release, see published by Dr. Stephen Larson on May 3, 2017 where this Blu-ray release scored 4.5 out of 5. Director: Writers:, Starring:,,,,, ».

Streets of Fire officially arrives on US Blu-ray as spine #16 in Shout Select's catalog. Shout delivers a two-disc Collector's Edition with the main feature on its own BD-50 and all the bonus materials on a separate BD-50. Shout gives Hill's movie an AVC-encode, presenting it in the aspect ratio of 1.85:1 which mirrors its theatrical exhibition. Shout's deluxe package marks the film's fifth edition on Blu-ray, following Koch Media in Germany, Second Sight in the UK, Pulp Video in Italy, and Wild Side Video in France (not to mention Universal's 2007 HD DVD). Shout advertises this transfer as a new 2K scan of the interpositive.

May 15, 2012 - 4 min - Uploaded by TuriMusikMix - Rolling Stones - Trident Jam (Instrumental) Sticky Fingers Revisited YouTube Rolling.

This transfer differs in several respects compared to the Koch and Second Sight releases. Koch removed quite a bit of the film grain and also had some edge enhancement issues. The UK version has relatively coarse grain in places but in others, as my colleague Dr. Svet Atanasov notes in his review of Second Sight's disc, has moderate to heavy noise. Thankfully, the grain structure is more consistent on Shout's disc.

Color saturation is also more stable and contrast has been improved. For the first reel and a half or so, there is a good amount of white speckles and dust that percolate the image.

These anomalies taper off for the rest of the film but some dirt crops up periodically. Additionally, there are minor scratches that appear in the frame for a millisecond. Overall, the transfer is at least a level up from the other BDs but would have been better had Shout cleaned up these source flaws. My score is 3.75.

Shout Select has supplied a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track and a DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 from the movie's original stereo mix. On Koch's BD, the German label only included a 5.1 option with an average bitrate of 2253 kbps and a bit depth of 16.

Second Sight included the stereo track as an LPCM 2. Autocad 2010 Product Key And Serial Number Crack Free Download. 0 (1536 kbps, 16-bit) and also the 5.1 track (2478 kbps, 16-bit). The Digital Fix's Mike Sutton, who saw Streets of Fire in the cinema back in '84, surmises that the UK's 5.1 is extracted from the 70mm 6-track mix. This also seems to be the case with Shout's rendering of the film's sound track in 5.1 but with a big difference. Shout's audio streams of both mixes are superior but this is particularly the case with the 5.1, which blows the other two discs out of the water. Shout encodes the 5.1 track at a whopping 4707 kbps with a bit depth of 24.

The master Shout has sourced is in excellent condition and sounds louder than ever. The concert numbers sound a little flat but they're boisterous with good directionality, although there isn't really any separation on the surrounds (and they're probably wasn't supposed to be). Where Shout excels is in the sound effects. There is a discreteness in the rear channels when a window breaks or the vrooms of the motorcycles and Studebakers are heard on the streets. Dialogue is generally discernible without any audible hiss or dropouts.

English SDH are available for the main feature. Shout Select has delivered a fantastic two-disc set for the cult classic Streets of Fire.

While the transfer is imperfect, it moves ahead in some key areas over the other European BDs. Shout's authoring and encoding of the lossless audio tracks is flawless. Shout has also assembled virtually all the older and more recently produced supplements from the other discs. Plus, it has added a very in-depth retrospective doc with scores of interviews with the principals. Hopefully, Paramount (or another label that licenses it) will get around to doing a special edition of Hill's commercial hit, 48 Hrs. In addition, I would love to see a BD of another Hill/Ry Cooder collaboration: Crossroads (1986). For the time being, indulge in Shout's deluxe edition of Streets of Fire.

VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

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