The film's genius lies in its chapters , which function like archeological layers:
| Tag | Meaning | Technical Depth | |-----|---------|----------------| | 720p | 1280×720 progressive scan | Not full HD (1080p). For a dark, atmospheric film like Exhuma , 720p loses shadow detail and grain texture compared to 1080p/4K. Acceptable for mobile/small screens. | | 10bit | 10-bit color depth per channel | Critical for gradients. Avoids banding in fog, night skies, and dimly lit ritual scenes. 10-bit HDR-like encoding but here likely in SDR—still superior to 8bit for occult horror with candlelight/fire. | | bluray | Source: Original Blu-ray | Uncompressed video/audio → compressed to x265. This is legally ambiguous unless you own the disc. | | 6ch | 6-channel surround (5.1) | Essential for Exhuma – directional sounds (digging, spirits moving, shaman chants) benefit from discrete rear/side channels. | | x265 | HEVC codec | ~50% smaller than x264 at same quality. But 720p x265 is unusual (x265 excels at 1080p+). May introduce artifacts in fast motion (e.g., exorcism scenes). | | h | Likely typo of x265 or HDR ? | Possibly leftover from "x265 HDR" or mis-tag. No HDR mentioned, so ignore. | | repack | Second upload fixing errors | Original release had: wrong aspect ratio, missing 6ch sync, or corrupted frames. Repack means the group fixed it. | exhuma2024korean720p10bitbluray6chx265h repack
Always prefer repack over proper if you want the definitive scene-group fix. The film's genius lies in its chapters ,
Which of those would you prefer?
Indicates the source material was a physical Blu-ray disc, ensuring the highest possible starting quality before compression. | | 10bit | 10-bit color depth per