| Component | Meaning | Significance | |-----------|---------|---------------| | Somewhere.in.Time | Film title | Standard naming | | 1980 | Release year | Distinguishes from other films with similar titles | | 1080p | Vertical resolution (1920x1080 pixels, progressive scan) | Full HD – offers 2.07 megapixels per frame, 6x more than DVD | | BluRay | Source format | Ripped directly from a commercial Blu-ray disc – the highest consumer source available | | x264 | Video codec | An efficient, high-quality compression standard (MPEG-4 AVC). Preserves fine detail while reducing file size | | HD4U | Release group tag | A scene or P2P group that encoded the file |
: Features the legendary, emotive musical score composed by John Barry , widely considered one of his finest works. Somewhere.in.Time.1980.1080p.BluRay.x264-HD4U -...
HD4U typically used the as their source, not a re-encoded retail disc. This meant minimal generational loss. Their Somewhere in Time rip preserved the grain structure of the 35mm film without excessive DNR (digital noise reduction), which plagued some studio releases. This meant minimal generational loss
: Playwright Richard Collier (Reeve) becomes obsessed with a 1912 photograph of actress Elise McKenna (Seymour) and uses self-hypnosis to travel back in time to meet her. The Past (1912): Filmed using soft-focus lenses and
The Past (1912): Filmed using soft-focus lenses and golden, warm lighting to evoke a dreamlike, romantic atmosphere.
The movie tells the story of Richard Collier (Christopher Reeve), a playwright who becomes obsessed with a photograph of a woman he sees on a poster for a play. He later learns that the woman is Elise McKenna (Jane Seymour), a renowned actress from the early 20th century. Richard becomes convinced that he has traveled back in time and meets Elise, and they begin a romantic affair. As their relationship deepens, Richard must navigate the challenges of being a man out of time, while Elise must confront the constraints of her life as a performer.