#Mad max fury road 4k blu ray include black and white version? tv#
So, what's keeping us from buying a new TV today, settling into the sofa and soaking up the HDR-enhanced version of "Daredevil"? You guessed it: a good old-fashioned format war. "Mad Max: Fury Road" is available in Dolby Vision from Vudu (left) and in HDR10 on 4K Blu-ray disc. And the big streaming services like Netflix, Amazon and Vudu are going all-in on the new tech, too - with compatible apps built right into those fancy new HDR TVs. You can watch the sumptuous HDR version of Oscar favorite "Mad Max: Fury Road" today. Studios from Fox to Warner to Netflix are prepping HDR versions of their latest movies and TV shows now. The mid- to high-end TVs in the 2016 model lines from all the major manufacturers will be HDR-ready. But both of those bridges have been crossed. You need HDR-compatible hardware (new TVs) and HDR content (movies, TV shows) to get this picture quality upgrade. HDR can look spectacular, creating a noticeable difference to the naked eye of everyday viewers - not just eagle-eyed videophiles. When TV HDR is properly implemented, the contrast between the whitest whites and darkest blacks is accentuated, colors are more realistic and the entire image becomes more vibrant. It's called HDR - short for high dynamic range, and it's very different from HDR for your phone camera. And smart TV is great, but all those cool streaming services are just a Roku, Chromecast or Fire TV away.īut for 2016 and beyond, there's a new TV technology that's actually worth caring about. The "advantages" of 4K are imperceptible even if you squint. If you snoozed through the past few generations of TV "innovations," you're not alone.