With DVD still dominating retailer's shelves, and digital downloads and upscaling players pinching some of the limelight, Blu-ray has had a pretty hard run of it of late. All is not lost for the format, however, it needs the right film release to get back on the straight and narrow.
With this in mind we've taken a look at upcoming releases and the films still to make it on to the format to compile TechRadar's list of movies that can, with a little luck, save Blu-ray from a fate worse than Laser Disc…
1. The Matrix
It was the film that gave the DVD format a much-needed shot in the arm when it was released back in '99 and Warner is hoping its forthcoming release will do the same with Blu-ray.
Picture-wise, the movie is 1080p, taken from a VC-1 codec and, thankfully, the whole trilogy is presented in its original 2.40:1 aspect ratio. Audio is Dolby TrueHD 5.1.
No matter what your quibbles are about the subsequent sequels, there's no getting around the fact that seeing bullet time in HD will be simply awesome. Couple this with the mountain of extras The Complete Matrix Trilogy has, including some HD-exclusive features, and this will be one unmissable Blu-ray release.
Release date: 24 November
2. The Godfather
The Godfather: The Coppola Restoration Collection has been out on Blu-ray for a while now, but its recent win at the High-Def Disc Awards, where it was given the prestigious title of 'Best Blu-ray of 2008' should hopefully make naysayers stand to attention.
The Godfather is not just an old re-release, either, the edition is the closest you will ever get to seeing the film as it looked in the cinema in 1972, in 1.78:1 aspect ratio with Dolby TrueHD 5.1 sound. If that isn't an offer you can't refuse, then we don't know what is.
Release date: out now
3. Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring
Peter Jackson is the king of the home entertainment format. He embraced Laser Disc, giving his comedy horror flick The Frighteners an extensive release, and his King Kong and Lord Of The Rings trilogy are still the best and most comprehensive discs on DVD.
Lord Of The Rings on Blu-ray will undoubtedly be something special. While it will be hard to top the original Extended Editions, just seeing The Shires in HD will be something special. And, who knows, he might slip his recent short film 'Crossing The Line' in as an extra. Shot with the brilliant 4k RED camera, it's one of the best things around in HD.
Release date: TBA
4. The Dark Knight
The best film of this year by a country mile, The Dark Knight has been mooted by many – and now TechRadar – as the film to save Blu-ray. Number crunching analysts are predicting the movie will hit the magical million mark when it is released in December.
The film will suit Blu-ray perfectly, with Nolan promising some hi-def exclusive extras, and you will be able to see the ground-breaking IMAX shots in 16:9.
There's no doubt that The Dark Knight will be huge, and with a release date just before Christmas, it could well be the movie to finally make average consumers take the hi-def plunge.
Release date: 8 December
5. Wall-E
While putting a near-silent movie onto Blu-ray may not sound like the greatest idea, the bleeps, whizzes and coo-ing of Wall-E (voiced by Ben Burtt), Pixar's latest and cutest creation, will sound superb in HD when it's released at the end of the month.




Your comments (6) Click to add a new comment
iggy82
November 16th 2008
6. I love blu-ray, I find myself more submerged in a film compared to DVD. I've also noticed something interesting which backs up my statement. My dad hasn't got a clue about technology... so hi def, blu-ray, etc is all beyond him. However, the strange thing is he always falls asleep during DVDs no matter how good the film but never falls asleep during Blu-Ray! I've been secrectly monitoring this for a while now, maybe the extra pixels stimulate his mind enough to stay awake!
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mrdlcastle
November 14th 2008
5. I think what will actually help BluRay become a standard is lowering the prices. Why exactly is a BD disk worth 50% more than the older DVD?
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clustertim
November 14th 2008
4. Personally, I would think Dark Knight alone would do it!
Jess
www.internet-anonymity.net.tc
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sanderton121108
November 12th 2008
3. > I've watched entire movies on an iPod Touch and it hasn't altered how much fun I've had from them.
By that reckoning we should all toss way our full HD plasma screens. Sorry, but pic quality and sound quality is part of the movie experience. maybe not the most important part, but part - and one bit you can do something about!
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weezer
November 12th 2008
2. Yeah, I agree. Look at music: if resolution was such an issue SACD and DVDA wouldn't be dead in the water, and CD on its long gradual decline.
Let's be brutally honest, watching the second Matrix movie in hi-def doesn't stop it being completely sh!t. When you're watching the Dark Knight on a decent DVD player and reasonable screen, does the screen resolution REALLY make that much difference?
I've watched entire movies on an iPod Touch and it hasn't altered how much fun I've had from them. For me (given that I have a Sky HD drip-feeding me content) Blu-ray is totally redundant.
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pete_l
November 12th 2008
1. Alternative title: my 10 favourite films. BTW, it's OK to like Sleeping Beauty
This hasn't got anything to do with blu-ray. "The people" have already demonstrated they're happy with normal-definition TV. they've spoken with their wallets that VHS is good enough. Some are even prepared to ruin thier eyesight watching TV on the postage stamp sized screens you get on mobile phones. The unassailable conclusion is that the technical quality of the picture is a loooong way down the list of priorities for what the masses are prepared to pay for. Therefore blu-ray simply cannot compete on technical quality - because no-one cares. Get the price down to £50 for a player and £5 per disk and you'll get a winner - no matter how good, bad, big or small the picture is.
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