Available via Tesco Direct (was £20 instore earlier - so assuming its online only at present).
Currently retailing for £20 so cheapest ive seen so far (same price as normal blu ray which this will include alongside a 4K UHD copy).
Note: The image Tesco have used on their site looks to be the standard blu ray case. However, the listing title and details are all for the 4K version (the displayed reduction from £20 to £15 also gives me confidence it is the correct version despite the wrong case image :smiley: ).
I actually really enjoyed this, don't think it discredited the first film. Good price.
All comments (30)
collectorcol
9 Jun 17#1
Heat for price. Movie any good? Need some 4K material.
DexMorgan to collectorcol
9 Jun 171#2
I loved the first movie and was disappointed with this one.
Ok for nostalgia purposes I suppose.
SmilezMC to collectorcol
10 Jun 17#8
proper **** lol
FlappyPappy
9 Jun 17#3
Nice.
kingmobuk
9 Jun 171#4
same, first was a masterpiece, this was terrible
jjsm639
9 Jun 176#5
I actually really enjoyed this, don't think it discredited the first film. Good price.
Mac007
10 Jun 172#6
It's a missprint ordered 3days ago and blu Ray version turned up not 4
sinxa
10 Jun 171#7
Honestly I really can not tell the difference between blue ray and 4k. I have an LG 55C6V. I feel like buying 4K movies for £15-£20 is a big waste of money. I buy blue rays for £1-£2 , they look and sound great. The only small improvement I have noticed is streaming Netflix 4K with Dolby Vision, but even that is extremely minimal.
ST3123 to sinxa
10 Jun 17#23
I'm no videophile but I find that I am fairly sensitive to
video artifacts on fast moving scenes even sometimes on broadcast HD and notice
it a lot on now tv. I also find SD rather unpleasant to watch on larger HD and
UHD screens. I think 4K bluray and 4K in general (e.g. Netflix etc) does offer
a definite improvement over HD, even Bluray but it is subtle and I would have a
hard time describing exactly what that difference was or how to spot it, the
best I can come up with is I think the resolution gives more detail over a
longer distance than on regular bluray, so panning, scenery shots etc can
benefit. It is by no means night and day but I think it is there. Plus to an
extent it could be seen as a future investment as while our current sets may
not show a massive difference, as we upgrade to larger new sets with more
effective HDR implementations etc they might better 'bring out' the extra
details on these discs.
I think 4K Blurays priced at £15 like this one, even perhaps
up to £20 for bigger releases is ok value actually as you have to remember, all
(or at least most) 4K Blurays are triple sets (including regular blurays and HD
UVs) meaning if, like me, you only want the 4K disc, you can sell the regular
Blurays and HD UVs and sometimes make back a good third (sometimes even half)
the asking price….
razor_cristian_zex
10 Jun 17#9
Well good offer , tesco ... over because of my order
ibz100
10 Jun 17#10
I thoroughly enjoyed this movie; almost as much as the first!
CelicaGT-Four to ibz100
10 Jun 17#11
me too. watched it tonight, it was great. made me feel a bit old thoughlol
Opening post
Available via Tesco Direct (was £20 instore earlier - so assuming its online only at present).
Currently retailing for £20 so cheapest ive seen so far (same price as normal blu ray which this will include alongside a 4K UHD copy).
Note: The image Tesco have used on their site looks to be the standard blu ray case. However, the listing title and details are all for the 4K version (the displayed reduction from £20 to £15 also gives me confidence it is the correct version despite the wrong case image :smiley: ).
Deal URL (just in case its not working direct).
https://www.tesco.com/direct/trainspotting-2-4k-ultra-hd-blu-ray/671-6499.prd?skuId=671-6499
Top comments
All comments (30)
Ok for nostalgia purposes I suppose.
video artifacts on fast moving scenes even sometimes on broadcast HD and notice
it a lot on now tv. I also find SD rather unpleasant to watch on larger HD and
UHD screens. I think 4K bluray and 4K in general (e.g. Netflix etc) does offer
a definite improvement over HD, even Bluray but it is subtle and I would have a
hard time describing exactly what that difference was or how to spot it, the
best I can come up with is I think the resolution gives more detail over a
longer distance than on regular bluray, so panning, scenery shots etc can
benefit. It is by no means night and day but I think it is there. Plus to an
extent it could be seen as a future investment as while our current sets may
not show a massive difference, as we upgrade to larger new sets with more
effective HDR implementations etc they might better 'bring out' the extra
details on these discs.
I think 4K Blurays priced at £15 like this one, even perhaps
up to £20 for bigger releases is ok value actually as you have to remember, all
(or at least most) 4K Blurays are triple sets (including regular blurays and HD
UVs) meaning if, like me, you only want the 4K disc, you can sell the regular
Blurays and HD UVs and sometimes make back a good third (sometimes even half)
the asking price….