Sentences with phrase «featuring widescreen»

Sony introduced another new model in its VAIO family — VAIO S featuring a widescreen LED backlit 13.3 inch display with a...
Fire HD 10 features a widescreen 1280 x 800 high definition display with over a million pixels (149 ppi) for a bright, vivid picture.
The new tablets both feature widescreen HD displays — all the better for watching movies and TV shows — and come with a microSD slot for to boost capacity for holding all that content.
Beautiful HD display Fire HD 10 features a widescreen 1280 x 800 high definition display with over a million pixels (149 ppi) for a bright, vivid picture.
Rebuilt from the ground up using the Retro Engine, this remastered version of Sonic CD features widescreen, dual Japanese and US soundtracks as well as Tails as a bonus unlockable character!
The Remastered version features widescreen visuals and enhanced assets, but it is otherwise unchanged (for better or worse).

Not exact matches

The car includes luxury features such as Hi - Fi sound, private safes, widescreen TVs, phones, and a refrigerator.
Because high - density CDs store up to 10 times more digital data, they can carry a whole feature film with widescreen movie - style pictures and six tracks of stereo or multilingual sound.
Excellent 2.35:1 widescreen transfer on an RSDL disc features virtually zilch compression artifacts.
Screen formats: Widescreen Anamorphic 1.85:1 Subtitles: English; French; Spanish Language and Sound: English: Dolby Digital 5.1; English: Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo; French: Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo; Spanish: Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo Other Features: Color; interactive menus; scene access; trailers; making - of featurettes; commentary; games.
Camera (color, widescreen, HD, 3D), Pablo Plaisted; live action camera, Barry Peterson; editors, David Burrows, Chris McKay; music, Mark Mothersbaugh; production designer, Gran Freckelton; live action art directors, Jay Pelissier, Sue Chan; live action set decorator, Danielle Berman; sound (Dolby Digital / Datasat), Brannon Brown; supervising sound editor / designer, Wayne Pashley; re-recording mixers, Phil Heywood, Pashley, Greg Fitzgerald; animation supervisor, McKay; feature animation, Animal Logic; head of animation, Rob Coleman; FX supervisor, Carsten Kolve; special effects supervisor, Jimmy Lorimer; 3D conversion, Legend 3D; associate producers, Amber Naismith, Will Allegra; assistant director, Steve Day; casting, Mary Hidalgo.
The Blu - ray features a 1080p / VC -1 encoded widescreen presentation that is nice as it captures the bright colors of Vegas vividly and has solid contrast.
THE DVD Universal's DVD release features a sharp 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen presentation of the film featuring a minimum of grain and edge enhancements and superior contrast.
The DVD scores points for its fairly strong widescreen transfer and three bonus features, which if not fantastic, are at least something, i.e. more than most of the studio's live action canon can boast.
Lionsgate's Blu - ray delivers a highly pleasing feature presentation, hangs onto all the DVD's bonus features, and includes the movie's one and only widescreen DVD without adding anything to the list price.
The DVD has a short feature on the making of the film, which was created with off - the - shelf software as a sort of low - rent counterpart to the computer animation applied in fellow nominees «Shrek» and «Monsters, Inc.» The disc also has two music videos, a dozen promotional TV spots, seven games playable on computer DVD - ROM drives and full - screen and widescreen versions of the film.
The DVD offers an entirely satisfying 1.78:1 anamorphic widescreen and Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround feature presentation.
This rerelease offers a widescreen feature presentation and a few new extras.
The fine widescreen feature presentation and bonus Carol Spinney interview are appreciated.
The single disc DVD version is presented in widescreen with the following bonus features: an audio commentary with director Andrew Stanton, deleted scenes, featurettes (Animation Sound Design and WALL - E's Tour of the Universe) and two animated shorts (Presto and BURN - E).
Disc One features a nice, solid, rain - streaked 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer that shows the wear of its origins (a Spanish / Italian production on minimal funds and with time and subject limitations) yet acquits itself quite nicely and is arguably more lustrous than the Anchor Bay presentation.
Remastered in anamorphic widescreen and featuring TXH certified 5.1 Dolby Digital Surround Sound, you can purchase separately each of the five movies (Planet of the Apes, Beneath the planet of the Apes, Escape From the Planet of the Apes, Conquest of Planet of the Apes and Battle for the Planet of the Apes).
DVD Features: The unrated widescreen edition of «Dark Water» is definitely a DVD that any fan of the movie should pick up, but one that anyone else would find best to keep off their shopping list.
In September of 2012 it received a massive update featuring completely redrawn artwork to suit the high - res Retina Display, and then in May of last year it received an update to make it 64 - bit compliant and add widescreen support.
Don't expect original Xbox games on Xbox One to feature Achievements or widescreen support on your fancy new HD TV, Microsoft's Phil Spencer has...
There are no bonus features on the unrated widescreen release, available in both Blu - ray and DVD formats.
Though the case still makes no mention of them, the DVD does include a number of bonus features, all of them short and widescreen videos.
Support this site when you buy Annie now from Amazon.com: Blu - ray / Widescreen & P&S DVD / Pan & Scan DVD / P & S Double Feature DVD / Instant Video
The only bonus feature on the R - rated widescreen Blu - ray release is the behind - the - scenes featurette «Making Sidney Hall.»
Bonus materials on the 2 - disc widescreen Blu - ray + DVD + Digital release include deleted scenes with commentary by director Malcolm D. Lee; outtakes; extended performance of the song «Because of You» by Ne - Yo; feature commentary with director Malcolm D. Lee; and 3 behind - the - scenes featurettes.
After all, overstated or not, a generation's affections have yielded a delightful disc holding a long overdue widescreen feature presentation, worthwhile recycled extras, and an inspired cast and crew reunion you can only dream about your childhood favorite getting.
Though this presentation is touted as «family - friendly widescreen» on the sequel's official website, it is actually in the aspect ratio being employed for all of DisneyToon Studios» direct - to - video features today and 16x9 can be considered the original dimensions of the cartoon.
After releasing multiple DVDs of the film in unacceptable pan & scan, Sony finally does the film right in this widescreen Special Edition platter holding one of this year's best new bonus features.
While The Shaggy Dog took quite a bit longer than most films to land on disc, the wait seems acceptable, as Walt's first all - out comedy is treated to a delightful widescreen transfer and three worthwhile bonus features.
At least the feature presentation makes a strong impression, with a terrific soundtrack and an imperfect but highly pleasing widescreen transfer.
1080p High - Definition Widescreen (2.35:1) / DTS - HD Master Audio 5.1 / 1982 / Approximate Feature Running Time: + / - 109 minutes / English Subtitles / Special Features Are Not Rated.
DVD Features: Commentary by director Jim Isaac, Writer Todd Farmer, and Producer Noel Cunningham; Theatrical trailer (s); Original documentary: The Many Lives of Jason Voorhees; Original documentary: By Any Means Necessary: The Making of Jason X; Jump to a Death Feature; Widescreen anamorphic format
The feature film is presented in the 1:66:1 widescreen aspect ratio and is enhanced for 16x9 televisions, resulting in tiny black bars on the sides that won't be visible on most screens due to overscan.
THE DVD Released on a double - sided platter on the Fox Family Feature imprint, The Pagemaster's 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer is dull and undistinguished.
(Color, widescreen); editor, Chris Plummer; music, Marius de Vries; feature animation, Industrial Light & Magic; animation supervisor, Kim Ooi; sound designer (Dolby Atmos), E.J. Holowicki; supervising sound editor, Steve Slanec; re-recording mixers, Tom Johnson, Juan Peralta; senior visual effects supervisor, Tony Plett; visual effects supervisor, Nigel Sumner; senior animation producer, Jacqui Lopez; casting, David Rubin, Richard Hicks, Lindsay Perlman.
Britain fared better, with my favourite sci - fi horror film in a long time, Glazer's Under the Skin, and my favourite entertainment film of the year, the conventional, but charming Pride, while the flawed Mr. Turner impressively reflects the great painter's sun worship through Dick Pope's widescreen cinematography.Highlights of my year included being on the FIPRESCI jury at the Hong Kong IFF, where I admired Yang Hen's third feature, Na pian hu shui (Lake August), and a couple of first features among others, as well as attending the amazing HK film market for the first time, where I saw one of my three 2014 «films for the ages», Tsai's Journey to the West; and seeing a nitrate print of Hitchcock's Rebecca at the George Eastman House in Rochester (where they are doing a three - day all - nitrate festival in May, 2015!).
This Special Edition DVD adds 16:9 enhancement to the feature, presenting Return to the Sea in anamorphic widescreen for the first time.
It arrives in the same mold as the two that preceded it, boasting a new widescreen transfer, a Buddies - centric bonus feature, and an in - pack goodie.
The widescreen DVD release of «Beerfest» features an unrated cut of the film, audio commentaries by the Broken Lizard guys, deleted scenes and three production featurettes.
Making his feature debut, director Richard Wong shot on digital video but transferred the final product to a 2.35:1 widescreen frame, and he uses it with amazing finesse, emphasizing wide, empty spaces and dramatic positioning within.
Besides a superb 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen transfer that gets the soft, greyish Bill Butler look just right and a Dolby Digital 5.1 mix that fills the room with abstract thunder during each of Dad's «visions,» the disc features three good commentary tracks and more.
The DVD features both the full - frame and widescreen versions of the film.
Running time: 129 minutes Studio: Fox Home Entertainment 3 - Disc DVD Extras: Widescreen theatrical feature film, unrated director's cut, Wolverine theatrical trailer, Valkyrie, S. Darko, The Wrestler, Seth MacFarlane's Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy, commentary by director George Tillman, Jr., screenwriters Reggie Rock Bythewood and Cheo Hodari Coker, and editor Dirk Westervelt, commentary by with Biggie's mom Voletta Wallace, and his manager Wayne Barrow, Behind the Scenes: The Making of Notorious, I Got a Story to Tell: The Lyrics of Biggie Smalls, Notorious Thugs: Casting the Film, Biggie Boot Camp, Anatomy of a B.I.G. Performance, Party & [Expletive](never before seen footage), The B.I.G. Three - Sixty, Directing the Last Moments, It Happened Right Here, The Petersen Exit, The Shooting, The Impala, The Unfortunate Violent Act, The Window, 9 Deleted Scenes, 4 extended / alternate concerts, trailers from: Secret Life of Bees, Gospel Hill and Slumdog Millionaire, digital copy.
Presented in a widescreen video transfer and Dolby Digital 5.1 audio soundtrack, the «Man on Fire» DVD includes two full - length audio commentary tracks (the first by director Tony Scott, and the other with producer Lucas Foster, screenwriter Brian Helgeland and star Dakota Fanning), as well as deleted scenes and an alternate ending (also featuring optional director commentary).
The disc features the IMAX presentation, with the film letterboxed in the 2.39:1 widescreen format with some scenes reverting to IMAX full frame and special effects spilling out of the frame and into the black bars.
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