Frozen.2013.2160p.bluray.av1.truehd.atmos.en.mkv
The first two parts are straightforward. Frozen is the 53rd Disney animated feature, released in 2013. Directed by Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee, it became a cultural phenomenon, spawning the hit song “Let It Go” and grossing over $1.2 billion worldwide.
In naming conventions, the year disambiguates the release from remakes, sequels, or other films with the same title. For Frozen, there’s also Frozen II (2019), so the year ensures you’re getting the original.
While the video codec is future-tech, the audio codec is "endgame" quality for home theaters. Frozen.2013.2160p.BluRay.AV1.TrueHD.Atmos.en.mkv
This is the gold standard for home theater audio.
Matroska (MKV) is a flexible open-source container format. Unlike MP4, MKV supports: The first two parts are straightforward
The fact that this file is .mkv indicates it was likely muxed using tools like mkvmerge from the original Blu-ray’s M2TS transport stream after encoding the video to AV1.
Option 1 (Best for PC): Download VLC media player (version 3.0.18 or newer) or MPV. Both support AV1 and TrueHD passthrough. While the video codec is future-tech, the audio
Option 2 (Best for TV): Use a 2023+ streaming device like the Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K Max (3rd gen), Roku Ultra (2024), or Nvidia Shield (2019 Pro – note: the Shield does NOT support AV1 hardware decoding, so avoid this file with Shield). Correction: Actually, the Shield does not have AV1 support, so avoid this file with any Shield.
Option 3 (Transcoding): If you use Plex or Jellyfin, a powerful server (e.g., Intel Arc GPU or modern desktop CPU) can transcode AV1 to a compatible format on the fly. Most NAS devices cannot handle this.