L.a. Confidential -1997- -bluray- -1080p- -yts-...
When people discuss the greatest films of the 1990s, (1997) is often the name that anchors the conversation. Adapted from James Ellroy’s dense, sprawling novel, director Curtis Hanson achieved what many thought impossible: a streamlined, razor-sharp detective story that captures the dark underbelly of 1950s Los Angeles.
Dante Spinotti shot the film using anamorphic lenses to capture a wide, cinematic scope. In the 1080p encode, the benefits of this high-definition resolution are immediately apparent: L.A. Confidential -1997- -BluRay- -1080p- -YTS-...
The transfer handles the vivid, saturated lipsticks of the femme fatales and the warm, golden hues of the California sun without artifacting or color bleeding. Technical Breakdown: The YTS Encoding When people discuss the greatest films of the
| Feature | Official Blu-ray (2008) | YTS 1080p Release (Typical) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Direct 2K/1080p master from studio | Ripped from Blu-ray master | | Video Encoding | VC-1 (high-bitrate) | x264 / x265 (low-bitrate) | | Average Bitrate | ~15-25 Mbps or higher | ~1.5-3 Mbps (often 1.5-2.5 GB total file size) | | File Size | ~20-30 GB (full disc) | ~1.5-2.5 GB (typically 1080p) | | Audio | Lossless (Dolby TrueHD 5.1) | Compressed (AAC/MP3, often stereo) | | Visual Quality | Excellent: Rich colors, sharp detail, smooth motion, deep blacks | Acceptable: Soft image, visible artifacts (blocking/banding) in dark/action scenes, compression noise | In the 1080p encode, the benefits of this