

With beautiful natural greens and blue waters on Scarif, supported by intensely popping explosions on the surface and bold laser blasts above during theīattle, which is one of the most exciting scenes in any Star Wars film. The UHD handles everything within the movie's visual spectrum with fantastic faithfulness and explodes in the final act On Jedha are beautiful, with Stormtrooper costumes boasting white depth and clarity well beyond Blu-ray while also capturing wear and scruff inĬlose-up with tactile definition. It's otherwise a visually bland scene but on UHD it's suddenly a rich, vibrant experience while maligning Wear-and-tear around the ragtag Rebellion, particularly the original trilogy, but this one takes the audience to darker corners heretofore unseen.īlack level excellence extends to the Rebel base first seen in chapter seven, and HDR brings the teal-colored maps (or whatever they are) to life with a Certainly other Star Wars films capture the The audience down into the nitty gritty, blood, sweat, and tears corners of the Rebellion. The film is the most visually restrained in the franchise, pulling The film, even as it's largely gray and bleak and earthy in its early and middle stretches. Of the accumulated raindrops on his garment absolutely puts the viewer right there in front of him. The white balance is spectacular, the clarity intimate and razor-sharp, and the definition Look at the first close-up depicting Krennic confronting Galen. There is added depth to natural greens around the Erso homestead and sharper textures on rocks, dirt, and structures.

There is a sizable increase in color depth and density evident right off the bat,Ĭonsidering both the outer space blacks that dominate the screen in the opening seconds and the newly intensive blue sky over Lah'mu, which appears Rogue One's 2160p/HDR UHD hits the mark from the start. The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc.
