End.of.days.1999.1080p.bluray.x264.dual.audio.h...

The film was shot on 35mm film using Panavision cameras. The 1080p Blu-ray transfer is sourced from a high-definition master. Colors – notably the pervasive steel blues and hellish reds – are accurate. Black levels, crucial for the film’s many dark alley and underground scenes, are deep without crushing detail.

The video was sourced from an original BluRay disc, not a DVD, streaming service, or television broadcast. BluRay sources generally offer higher bitrates and less compression than streaming.

The keyword string cuts off, but common completions could be:

For legal archiving purposes, a full filename might read:
End.of.Days.1999.1080p.BluRay.x264.Dual.Audio-Hi10P.mkv End.of.Days.1999.1080p.BluRay.x264.Dual.Audio.H...


Watch it. In 1080p. With dual audio if you’re practicing a foreign language. Just do it legally – and enjoy one of the most underrated action-horror hybrids of the 1990s.

It looks like you’re asking about a feature related to the file:
End.of.Days.1999.1080p.BluRay.x264.Dual.Audio.H...

From the filename fragment, here are the likely key features of this release: The film was shot on 35mm film using Panavision cameras

The H... might be:

If you need a specific feature (like chapters, subtitles, bitrate, HDR, commentary, menu extras) — please clarify and I can give a more precise answer.

Would you like to know how to play dual audio, extract a specific audio track, or check if this file has embedded subtitles? For legal archiving purposes, a full filename might

It looks like you’ve provided a partial filename for the film End of Days (1999) — specifically a 1080p BluRay rip with Dual Audio. Based on that, I’ll assume you’d like a write‑up suitable for a review, database entry (like IMDb or Letterboxd), or a release note for a fan preservation/archival post.

Below is a polished, detailed write‑up for End of Days (1999).


This is a specific implementation of the H.264/MPEG-4 AVC standard. x264 is open-source and known for excellent compression efficiency. At 1080p, a well-tuned x264 encode can look virtually indistinguishable from the source while reducing file size from ~25 GB (on disc) to anywhere between 6 GB and 12 GB, depending on settings.

A keyword ending in “H...” likely indicates a release group’s name or an abbreviation for “H264” or “Hi10P” (high 10-bit profile), but x264 is the core codec.

Instead of hunting for incomplete or risky downloads, here are legitimate sources to watch End of Days in 1080p or better: