Jurassic.park.1993.35mm.1080p.cinema.dts.superwide.open.matte.v1.0

Wait, 1080p? Isn’t 4K the standard now? Yes, but resolution isn’t everything. This 1080p is not upscaled from a DVD. This is a native 2K scan of a 35mm print. Film has an optical resolution of roughly 4K-6K for fine detail, but a release print (a dupe, not the original negative) loses a generation. A pristine 1080p scan from a 35mm release print often looks more cinematic than a wax-faced 4K transfer because it retains the analog texture.

Crucially, this is an unmolested 1080p. No DNR (Digital Noise Reduction). No sharpening halos. Wait, 1080p

This is the first version of this preservation. "v1.0" implies: Warning: The director framed for 1

This is where the magic happens. Open Matte means the person who scanned the print did not apply the theatrical matte. They scanned the entire 1.33:1 (4:3) frame from the 35mm negative/print. Why does this matter? but a release print (a dupe

Warning: The director framed for 1.85:1. Open Matte is not “correct,” but it is revelatory. For preservationists, it’s like seeing the original camera negative’s full aperture gate. It reveals the craft.