Deliverance 1972 Extras 1080p Bluray X265

The keyword includes "Extras" for a reason. The theatrical cut of Deliverance is only half the story. The 2007 Warner Bros. Deluxe Edition (and subsequent reissues) features supplements that are essential viewing. When searching for your file, ensure the following extras are included:

A modern addition to later Blu-ray pressings: short video essays from critics like Mark Kermode on the film’s legacy as a masculine anxiety nightmare. In crisp 1080p, these are a joy. deliverance 1972 extras 1080p bluray x265

A 15-minute featurette breaking down the legendary “Dueling Banjos” sequence. You’ll learn that the boy (Billy Redden) couldn’t actually play—a local musician hid behind him with his arms around the kid’s waist. The 1080p transfer reveals the clever camera angles hiding the musician’s shoulders. The keyword includes "Extras" for a reason

When you see the label Deliverance 1972 extras 1080p bluray x265, verify these details (whether you’re ripping your own disc or acquiring a scene release): these are a joy.

| Element | Ideal Specification | | :--- | :--- | | Video | 1080p (1920x1080), 23.976 fps, 10-bit color (for smoother gradients) | | Audio | DTS-HD MA 5.1 (original theatrical mono also included) | | Encoding | x265 (crf 18-20 for near-lossless) | | Extras | All featurettes, commentary, and trailer in SD or upscaled 480p/1080i | | Chapters | 12-16 chapter markers (essential for the “dueling banjos” and “climbing the cliff” scenes) |

Warning: Avoid low-bitrate x265 encodes under 2 GB for the main feature. At that size, the dark scenes during the nighttime survival sequence will break into digital blocks.

These are not filler. The original 1972 trailers spoil almost nothing, selling the film as an adventure epic rather than a horror-thriller. Watching them gives context to how audiences were deceived (and then traumatized) upon release.