The Raid - Redemption -2011- Remastered Bluray ... ✭ «REAL»
In the pantheon of 21st-century action cinema, few films have landed with the bone-shattering impact of Gareth Evans’ 2011 Indonesian masterpiece, The Raid: Redemption (originally titled Serbuan maut). For over a decade, its relentless choreography and brutal efficiency have set the gold standard for hand-to-hand combat on film. But for home theater enthusiasts and action purists, the hunt for the definitive viewing experience often leads to one specific format: The Raid - Redemption - 2011 - REMASTERED BluRay.
If you buy this version, the special features typically include: The Raid - Redemption -2011- REMASTERED BluRay ...
Standard BluRay releases of The Raid used an older MPEG-4 AVC codec. The REMASTERED version (typically released by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment around 2018-2019) features: In the pantheon of 21st-century action cinema, few
In the pantheon of modern action cinema, few films have landed with the seismic impact of Gareth Evans’ The Raid: Redemption (2011). For over a decade, this Indonesian powerhouse has been the gold standard for choreographed violence, practical stunts, and relentless pacing. But for fans who thought they knew every crack of bone and echo of gunfire in the昏暗 hallways of that Jakarta tenement block, the release of the The Raid – Redemption -2011- REMASTERED BluRay changes everything. If you buy this version, the special features
This isn’t just a cash-grab upscale. The new REMASTERED BluRay edition offers a visceral, eye-bleeding upgrade that demands a reevaluation of the film’s technical artistry. Here is everything you need to know about the remaster, the new special features, and why this is the definitive way to experience Rama’s bloody ascent.
If the visual upgrade is impressive, the lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track on the REMASTERED BluRay is apocalyptic. The Raid is famous for its sound design—the wet thud of a skull hitting a broken doorframe, the metallic ring of a machete clash, and Mike Shinoda & Joseph Trapanese’s electronic-industrial score.
The remaster has rebalanced the low end. The shotgun blasts now have a chest-crushing weight, while the subtle foley work (the squeak of shoes on wet linoleum) is sharper than ever. For home theater enthusiasts, this disc will become your new reference standard for “punch impact.”