Best Blurays IconBest Blurays
Cast
/
Kemba Walker

Kemba Walker

1 Film

Kemba Walker

1 Included Film

Kemba Walker photo

Kemba Hudley Walker (born May 8, 1990) is an American professional basketball coach and former player. He was picked ninth overall by the Charlotte Bobcats in the 2011 NBA draft, going on to become the franchise's all-time leader in many statistical categories, including points, minutes, and three-point field goals. Walker also played for the Boston Celtics, New York Knicks, and the Dallas Mavericks before finishing his career with AS Monaco. In college, he played basketball for the Connecticut Huskies. In their 2010–11 season, Walker was the nation's second-leading scorer and was named consensus first-team All-American; he also led the Huskies to a 2011 NCAA championship victory and claimed the tournament's Most Outstanding Player award. Walker is a four-time NBA All-Star, a one-time All-NBA Team member, two-time winner of the NBA Sportsmanship Award, as well as a LNB Élite champion.

Marty Supreme poster
UHD Blu-ray
Best English-Friendly:

Entertainment in Video GBR UHD Blu-ray

Best Video:

Entertainment in Video GBR UHD Blu-ray

Best Audio:

Entertainment in Video GBR UHD Blu-ray

Additional Info:

The GBR UHD and CAN UHD both do not have the low-pass that the USA UHD has. The GBR UHD has some general blockiness and chroma artifacting issues, but the CAN UHD has at least a handful of scenes where the encode completely falls apart and massive macroblocks are visible. The CAN UHD also does not have hardcoded forced subtitles for the newsreel scene like the USA and GBR. The grade is the same between all three discs. Selected the GBR as it was the most balanced option with no low-pass and no overly distracting encode issues.

The GBR UHD, like the USA UHD, has incorrect L5 that can be edited in the RPU.

The Atmos mix is the same between the USA UHD and the GBR UHD save for the amount of dynamic objects: the GBR has 15 to the USA's 11. Because sound quality is identical and the extra dynamic objects do not appear to be silent, the GBR track was selected. The GBR UHD also has a DD-EX compatibility track and a lossless version of the commentary track that is in Dolby Digital on the USA and CAN UHDs.

Marty Supreme poster
UHD Blu-ray
Best English-Friendly:

Entertainment in Video GBR UHD Blu-ray

Best Video:

Entertainment in Video GBR UHD Blu-ray

Best Audio:

Entertainment in Video GBR UHD Blu-ray

Additional Info:

The GBR UHD and CAN UHD both do not have the low-pass that the USA UHD has. The GBR UHD has some general blockiness and chroma artifacting issues, but the CAN UHD has at least a handful of scenes where the encode completely falls apart and massive macroblocks are visible. The CAN UHD also does not have hardcoded forced subtitles for the newsreel scene like the USA and GBR. The grade is the same between all three discs. Selected the GBR as it was the most balanced option with no low-pass and no overly distracting encode issues.

The GBR UHD, like the USA UHD, has incorrect L5 that can be edited in the RPU.

The Atmos mix is the same between the USA UHD and the GBR UHD save for the amount of dynamic objects: the GBR has 15 to the USA's 11. Because sound quality is identical and the extra dynamic objects do not appear to be silent, the GBR track was selected. The GBR UHD also has a DD-EX compatibility track and a lossless version of the commentary track that is in Dolby Digital on the USA and CAN UHDs.

1 film

Privacy PolicyAbout

Made with ❤️ 📀 by vanshady