4K Blu-ray is a big deal here at TechRadar. We're fans, collectors, and it's our number one source for testing the best TVs and best soundbars.
Since November 2024, we've had a monthly column called the Blu-ray Bounty, where we write about the best 4K discs from each month, testing how they can show off a home theater system at its best.
My top 6 of 2026 (so far) - US deals
My top 6 of 2026 (so far) - UK deals
Lawrence of Arabia
Lawrence of Arabia is a perfect showcase for what 4K can do. The movie's staggeringly beautiful cinematography looks excellent in 4K, with lifelike textures and colors. Detail is seriously refined and the restoration job is immaculate.
The Dolby Atmos and DTS-HD 5.1 MA soundtrack options not only bring Maurice Jarre's soaring, epic score to life, but also deliver clear speech and some surprisingly impactful bass, as well as detailed surround effetcs.
Minority Report
Minority Report has an intriguing picture, with intentionally grainy and over-bright scenes throughout. But, this 4K restoration, especially in Dolby Vision, translates these choices cleanly, while also delivering strong contrast and sharp visuals that look fantastic.
The DTS-HD 5.1 MA soundtrack included is so immersive, it could be mistaken for Dolby Atmos. The jetpack scene in particular demonstrates a wide soundstage with precise directionality that can really show off a full surround system.
Predator: Badlands
Weighty bass, pinpoint sound-mapping, and engaging impact that feels real, Predator: Badland's Dolby Atmos soundtrack is a superb showcase. Crunching fight scenes, tense scenes with snapping twigs: you name it, this disc has it.
Predator: Badlands is also a great example of a clean, modern 4K presentation. It's got crisp textures, sometimes bold colors, and powerful contrast in the movie's darker scenes.
Bugonia
A visually striking movie, Bugonia looks brilliant in 4K. Color reproduction is sublime, striking a great balance between lifelike and vibrant, detail is refined with realistic textures, and there's good contrast between dark and light tones.
The Dolby Atmos soundtrack delivers the movie's tense score well, but it's the film's more visceral moments that are delivered well here, with sickeningly realistic detail.
Captain Blood
Another advert for the power of 4K, Captain Blood has been brilliantly restored. For a movie that's over 90 years old(!), it looks sensational. Textures such as skin and detail in environments appear lifelike. Entirely in black-and-white, contrast is impressive, with nicely defined dark and light tones with plenty of gray in between.
Not a great deal to write about the disc's monoaural soundtrack, but it has been refreshed, meaning speech is clear and effects have good clarity when needed.
Dead Man
Dead Man looks stellar in 4K. Filmed in black-and-white, contrast is strong with dazzling whites and deep blacks, with refined gray tones. Detail is both crisp and realistic, with skin and the beautiful, natural environments given a nice uplift in 4K.
A DTS-HD 2.0 soundtrack won't test your system to its limit, but it perfectly translates both Neil Young's excellent solo-guitar score and the sounds of nature and gunfire in equal measure.










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