Movie Info :. IMDb Ratings: 8. PLOT: The Avengers and their allies must be willing to sacrifice all in an attempt to defeat the powerful Thanos before his blitz of devastation and ruin puts an end to the universe. ScreenShot 1 ScreenShot 2. Compressed Version. Thanos departs with his lieutenants and destroys the ship. Maw captures Strange, but fails to take the Time Stone due to an enchantment.
He is so determined to get all six gems, each gem making him stronger. The Avengers and Guardians have to race against time to stop him from finding all six.
His crew Dark Order also seem unbeatable as they battle the rest of the Avengers in Wakanda with their alien army which also proves difficult. Thanos gets some interesting backstory, it would have been even better if the menacing Dark Order got some backstory themselves as we never really understand them or their motivations.
Although Infinity War feels over stuffed with characters and storylines, the Russo Brothers do an exceptional job by giving each character enough to do. Its great to see some focus on characters like Gamora and Thor as previous films have kept it prominently on characters Iron Man, Hulk and Captain America. This entry really does require you to see all of the ones before it as it can become confusing. There are too many visual effects shots which could have been avoided using practical effects.
With Avengers: Infinity War , any question about the importance of proper top-quality viewing formats for home entertainment are ended. It's not realistically debatable anymore, and fandom needs to understand how significant this issue is, and why the answer will have a major impact on how they enjoy these movies from now on.
I've repeatedly explained my personal obsession with image and audio quality both in theaters and in home entertainment, so I won't do a deep dive into that again here.
Suffice to say, my entire adult life has included a quest to experience my favorite entertainment in the best venues and on the best home theaters possible. While I can appreciate the benefits and qualities of a variety of options and experiences, when it comes to embracing and eagerly, enthusiastically encouraging other viewers to engage a piece of entertainment in a particular manner, I am singularly specific and will always offer a strong opinion endorsing what I feel is the best option, without qualifications.
And that's where we are at today with home entertainment. And while plenty of examples exist to prove the point about 4K or Dolby Vision in general, Avengers: Infinity War stands as the turning point in the discussion, head and shoulders above all other comers so far.
I wish I could invite all of you fans to my house to see Infinity War the way I have been blessed to enjoy it since its home release, on a giant TCL television screen in streaming 4K Dolby Vision. For home release, I first saw Infinity War in regular Blu-ray, and it still looked great and was wildly entertaining. Then I watched it on 4K Blu-ray, and was -- as you can imagine, I'm sure -- impressed by the jump in quality of image and color compared to standard Blu-ray.
Then I watched it in streaming 4K Dolby Vision, and my mind melted and I literally texted several friends and family to tell them how amazed I was by what I was experiencing. This isn't hyperbole and it's not irrelevant to you, readers. If you have already seen Infinity War in 4K, and you were impressed, I cannot stress enough to you that even the regular 4K pales in comparison to the color and image clarity and realism generated by viewing it in 4K Dolby Vision.
Fans of comic book films need to keep in mind how much branding matters to us all, and how much we have our particular preferences for ways to enhance our viewing experience. Now, for the record, like most of you I've watched tons of these films on my mobile devices while traveling or staying somewhere without my personal home entertainment system, and I can enjoy them that way just fine too.
Many fans probably think the specifics of higher image and color and sound quality don't matter much to them, and will say so in online conversations.
But I think most fans are smart people and, regardless of general sentiment about how much increased fidelity matters for a particular film, can still admit and appreciate the enhanced quality and effects of a better viewing experience.
That also means you need a TV that's compatible with Dolby Vision, such as my own TCL model it's the version, there are new TVs on the market now with minor changes and differences, but I've not got one yet since this set is still so new and my wife doesn't want more than one TV at a time in our house -- I'd love to have a TV in every room, but as I said I'm crazy about my home viewing experience and my wife is sane, so No Dolby Vision home experience I've had up to this point compared to the Infinity War experience, it's at a level thus far unparalleled in home entertainment and is like a massive ad for the point '4K Dolby Vision is the greatest thing you'll ever see.
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