John.carter.2012.1080p.bluray.x265.hevc.10bit.7... Here

Standard 8-bit video suffers from color banding in skies, shadows, and gradients. 10-bit encoding nearly eliminates this, even when output on an 8-bit display (due to better dithering during playback). For Mars’ orange-red skies and the blue energy of the “Thern” technology, 10-bit is a visual advantage.

| Format | Approx Size | Quality | Playback Compatibility | |--------|-------------|---------|------------------------| | Blu-ray Remux (AVC) | 35 GB | Reference | Universal | | x264 8-bit high bitrate | 12 GB | Near-lossless | Universal | | x265 10-bit medium | 6 GB | Transparent (to most users) | Needs HEVC decoder | | x265 10-bit low bitrate | 2 GB | Visible artifacts | Same as above |

The x265.HEVC.10bit encode targets the 6–8 GB range, ideal for keeping a large library on moderate NAS storage. John.Carter.2012.1080p.BluRay.x265.HEVC.10bit.7...

In summary, "John.Carter.2012.1080p.BluRay.x265.HEVC.10bit.7..." represents a high-quality video file of "John Carter" (2012) with the following characteristics:

This information suggests that the video file is of high quality, suitable for viewing on high-definition displays, with detailed video and potentially high-quality audio, depending on the specifics not fully captured in the provided filename snippet. Standard 8-bit video suffers from color banding in

While the keyword does not specify exact encoder settings, a group producing a transparent 1080p Bluray x265 10-bit encode would likely use:

--preset slower
--crf 16-18
--profile main10
--level 4.1
--no-sao
--deblock -1:-1
--no-strong-intra-smoothing
--aq-mode 3
--no-cutree (sometimes)

Why these matter:

For John Carter, which has CGI-heavy sequences (the Thark warriors, airships) and grainy live-action footage, these settings prevent “plastic” faces in motion.