I- Robot -2004- Open Matte -1080p Bluray X265 H... -
: The source material is a High-Definition Blu-ray disc, guaranteeing a crisp baseline resolution of 1920x1080 pixels.
The exact file string represents a highly sought-after, specialized home media release of Alex Proyas’s sci-fi blockbuster I, Robot (2004). This specific version provides a unique viewing format that changes how the film's visual composition and visual effects are experienced. Defining the Technical File Components
presentation, providing a taller image that fills a standard 16:9 widescreen TV without the black bars found in the theatrical release Technical Performance Aspect Ratio (Open Matte) I- Robot -2004- Open Matte -1080p BluRay x265 H...
The 2004 science fiction action hit I, Robot remains a landmark in visual effects and blockbuster filmmaking. Starring Will Smith as Detective Del Spooner, this futuristic thriller explores a world where advanced robots are part of daily life, governed by the strict Three Laws of Robotics. However, a murder mystery involving a robot leads to a deeper, more dangerous threat to humanity.
An version effectively removes these digital bars. Instead of stretching or distorting the image, it uncovers the uncropped image data from the top and bottom of the original film or digital sensor. Widescreen vs. Open Matte in 'I, Robot' : The source material is a High-Definition Blu-ray
Seen through a modern lens, the film's themes regarding the rapid integration of artificial intelligence, automated workforces, centralized networks (VIKI), and the ethical grey areas of autonomous machines feel remarkably relevant. Experiencing it in an uncropped, high-bitrate open matte format offers both a nostalgic trip back to mid-2000s blockbuster filmmaking and a fresh visual perspective on a predictive sci-fi text.
This suggests you have (or found) a version of I, Robot that is: An version effectively removes these digital bars
In the world of digital film archiving, few releases generate as much excitement among videophiles as an transfer of a major Hollywood blockbuster. When that film is Alex Proyas’ I, Robot (2004), starring Will Smith, and the encode uses x265 HEVC from a 1080p BluRay source , the result is something special.
In standard theatrical releases, I, Robot is framed in an ultra-widescreen , which creates prominent black "letterbox" bars at the top and bottom of standard 16:9 widescreen televisions.
A: Yes, but why would you? You’d lose the extra image.
For I, Robot , this results in a , which perfectly fills modern flat-screen TVs without the traditional black bars.