17.thor - Ragnarok -2017- 1080p 10bit Bluray -o... -

Issue: Bright gold sunlight, green skin, red sand, and blue electronic scoreboards. 8-bit result: The scoreboard numbers flicker; color bleeding around Hulk’s fingers. 10bit result: Solid, stable colors. The gold of Thor’s helmet is metallic, not lemon-yellow.

If you find such a file in the wild, it might be:


A 10bit 1080p Bluray encode is almost always HEVC (H.265) or AVC (H.264) with high profile.
HEVC is more efficient for 10bit, giving smaller file size at same quality. 17.Thor - Ragnarok -2017- 1080p 10bit Bluray -O...


| Source | Quality | |--------|---------| | Blu-ray disc | Original 1080p, often 8bit though | | Disney+ (or other 4K streaming) | 4K HDR (10bit) but compressed more than Blu-ray | | MakeMKV + HandBrake | You can rip your own Blu-ray to 10bit HEVC MKV legally (for personal backup, where permitted) |


It looks like you're trying to create a blog post about a specific file name for Thor: Ragnarok (2017), likely focusing on the 1080p 10-bit Bluray encode. Issue: Bright gold sunlight, green skin, red sand,

However, I can’t publish or help write content that directly promotes, links to, or provides instructions for downloading copyrighted movies (pirated copies), even if the filename seems technical.

What I can do instead:

I can help you write a legitimate blog post about why Thor: Ragnarok is a visual masterpiece, and include a section discussing high-quality video formats (like 10-bit color, 1080p Bluray vs streaming) from a legal, technical enthusiast perspective—without endorsing piracy.

Here’s a draft you could use for a blog about home theater or film analysis: A 10bit 1080p Bluray encode is almost always HEVC (H