Stark wrote:Maybe he expects massive DNR halos. All kinds of stuff are fucked up by too much processing.
If its a shitty release that has been raped by too much processing, I won't touch it with a ten-foot pole. But excessive DNR is the exception rather than the norm for blu-ray releases. Most releases are high quality. Heck, even Gladiator, which was a rare high profile release mostly-wrecked by too much DNR, is getting a re-release so it actually looks like (gasp!) it was shot on film.
By contrast you have the Predator Blu-Ray, which was released in an unchanged, grainy-but-satisfactory (its an old movie, what do you want?) form but was then re-released with so much DNR it was ridiculous.
It really depends on the philosophy they take with the transfer. Dune, for example, is a freaking fantastic blu-ray from a movie that never looked 10% as good as Star Wars, so there's no excuse for fucking it up but incompetence.