Prisoners.2013.1080p.10bit.bluray.6ch.x265.hevc... !!hot!! Link

Features 6-channel (5.1 surround sound) audio, essential for the film’s atmospheric and tension-building sound design.

A 2013 copy of the film Prisoners, encoded from a retail Blu-ray source to a 1920×1080 progressive scan file using the x265 implementation of HEVC, with 10-bit color depth to prevent banding, and a 5.1 surround sound audio track. Prisoners.2013.1080p.10bit.BluRay.6CH.x265.HEVC...

= number of bits used to represent the color of a single pixel per channel (Red, Green, Blue). Features 6-channel (5

Aristotle argued tragedy produces catharsis through pity and fear. Prisoners refuses catharsis. We pity Keller, but we fear him. We respect Loki, but we see his powerlessness. When Dover finally tortures the wrong man (Alex is innocent of the abduction, though not of prior evil), the audience has already been complicit in that torture. We wanted answers. The film indicts the viewer’s own thirst for vengeance. Aristotle argued tragedy produces catharsis through pity and

Performances Hugh Jackman gives perhaps the film’s most challenging performance, balancing paternal vulnerability with escalating brutality. He portrays Keller not as a caricatured villain but as a man whose love contorts into obsession. Jake Gyllenhaal’s Detective Loki is nuanced—patient, dogged, and quietly haunted—providing a moral counterpoint to Keller’s fury. Supporting turns by Viola Davis, Maria Bello, Terrence Howard, and Paul Dano (as the enigmatic Alex Jones) add emotional texture. Dano’s performance, in particular, resists clear interpretation: he is simultaneously pitiable and unnerving, which keeps the moral focus of the film unsettled.