No worries.
That's a little
to me, but to each their own...
But I was merely pointing out that, right now, those titles I wanted (which were replacing old full screen or non-anamorphic DVDs, mind you) were ONLY available on 1080p Blu-ray. We WOULD have bought the 4K versions if they were available.
If most of those big tentpole titles, such as the ones I just purchased on regular Blu, haven't come out already, I'm not sure if the studios will get around to transferring them, but, of course, who knows...
But:
Nahhhh. Switching full screen DVDs or non-anamorphic DVDs for regular Blu-ray versions is one thing. Trading up the Blu-ray versions for UHD Blu-ray versions is another, especially taking into consideration the fact that I'm not running a massive projection screen like many of you here are (thus I wouldn't be able to discern
that much of a resolution difference, even with the HDR uptick).
True -- though I've been burned a couple of times with old catalog titles that didn't turn out quite like I expected.
John Carpenter's Christine is a good example -- I replaced this title twice on DVD and then bought the 4K Blu-ray. I couldn't STAND the 4K's presentation...far too much film grain for my taste and black levels that wreaked havoc with my edge-lit Samsung display's HDR performance/local dimming (not the disc's fault there, but just pointing it out). In the case of
Christine, I prefer to watch the 1080p Blu-ray that came with the 4K in the Best Buy Exclusive Steelbook release.
On the flip side of that coin, I HAVE replaced a DVD or two with a 4K version, and the experience WAS night and day --
The Shining is a good example of this. I had the Digitally Remastered version of this on DVD, as taken from the Stanley Kubrick Collection from Warner Bros., which was presented in full screen (you know...that whole "Kubrick preferred it to be in an open-matted 4:3 form!" controversy), and when we got the 4K, it was like watching the classic for the first time (running the disc's HDR10+ layer, which my player and TV support).