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6 Reasons Physical Media Beats Streaming

Video streaming is cheap and convenient, but it can’t touch physical media like Blu-ray when it comes to content breadth, quality, and extras.

Updated February 9, 2022

Video streaming continues to surge in 2020, and it’s easy to understand its continued growth. COVID-19 has seen many movie theaters close, so more people than ever before turn to the internet for their entertainment. For roughly $10 to $15 per month, you can access vast film and television libraries from Apple TV+, Amazon Prime Video, CBS All Access, Disney+, HBO Max, Peacock, Netflix, and other video streaming services, with each offering a host of classics, middling fare, and new, trending content. Streaming is easy, and doesn't cost much money.

Building a Blu-ray library is not inexpensive, as you must purchase a standalone player (or next-gen game console) and individual discs that cost at least the price of a monthly streaming video subscription. Still, if you're a person who loves movies—a person who loves film—the Blu-ray and Ultra Blu-ray formats are the best ways to enjoy your favorite flicks. Here's why.

Blu-ray Has Superior Audio/Video Quality

If you own a HDR-compatible, 4K television and a good surround sound system or soundbar, you’ll want to experience the highest quality audio-visual content possible. Blu-ray, particularly Ultra HD Blu-ray, lets you do just that. The formats deliver the best possible picture and sound that’ll fit onto the disc, provided the source material is top notch. Apocalypse Now: Final Cut, Blade Runner 2049, and Pan's Labyrinth (the Criterion Collection release, not the mediocre 4K transfer) have some of the best pictures you'll see at home.

Unfortunately, video streaming’s holes are readily apparent. Hulu’s 4K support is spotty, and its HDR support is non-existent. HBO Max doesn’t currently support 4K or HDR, but that’s going to change starting with Wonder Woman 1984, a movie that debuts this month. NBCUniversal’s Peacock doesn’t support 4K or HDR at all, but likewise says that those features are coming in the future. CBS All Access supports 4K and HDR, but only on certain platforms.

On the upside, Apple TV+, Amazon Prime, Disney+, Google Play, Netflix, and YouTube do offer video streams containing these eye-catching features. That said, there’s no promise that they'll deliver best-in-class video and sound quality. These features require additional internet bandwidth, because the services must send streams with higher bit rates.

Each video streaming service works around this in a different way. Apple TV+ and Disney+ tend to stream at higher bit rates than their rivals, according to third-party testing. That analysis determined that this higher bit rate is “1.5-2x” that of a vanilla Blu-ray disc, but roughly half that of a Ultra HD Blu-ray disc. Netflix recently announced that it switched to new, optimized encoding that halved its 4K streams’ bit rates without changing the quality. Despite that contention, some people did notice lower quality 4K streams, something Netflix says is an outlier.

HBO Max is one of the streaming services with the classics

Blu-ray Doesn’t Require an Internet Connection

With video streaming services, you can access programs as long as your internet is working. Sure, your internet connection may be fast and dependable right now, but everyone has experienced (or will experience!) a network outage. This is a particularly important issue as you move away from urban and suburban environments where the internet is stable. Some areas have poor internet connectivity; some don’t have internet at all.

Beyond that, some people deal with internet providers that have established bandwidth caps, something that streaming 4K video easily devours. (It’s a problem with game streaming services, too.) If you’re streaming 4K video with HDR and surround sound, you’ll be pulling a pretty hefty stream. Depending on your bandwidth limitations, you may need to upgrade your internet service plan.

Blu-ray discs shine in these situations, because they let you watch a film or television show when the internet falters. As long as your place has power, you can pop in a flick and not worry about outages or smashed data caps. Plus, a Blu-ray disc's picture quality isn't tied to your internet connection's speed.

You Can’t Find Everything on Streaming Services

There are many movies and shows that you won’t find on, say, Netflix. The Super Mario Bros movie from 1993 is horrible, but it’s worth at least seeing once. You can’t find it on streaming. Kevin Smith’s 1999 film Dogma isn’t available on any video streaming service, because the rights sit with Bob & Harvey Weinstein. The Basketball Diaries, one of Leonardo DiCaprio’s early films, is also missing from video streaming platforms. All of them are easily purchased on Blu-ray.

In addition, many video streaming services suffer a recency bias. You’ll find the best black-and-white films on services like Criterion Channel or in HBO Max’s TCM section, but the other films from that era are missing in action. Good luck firing up Netflix to watch On The Waterfront. Netflix and its ilk would rather push their own, original programming as they don't have to pay licensing fees for content. It’s a major problem in terms of film preservation.

Not all content is available on Blu-ray, but you’ll probably find at least a DVD release with little effort. And, as you know, Blu-ray players support DVD.

Video Streaming Services: What You Should Know
PCMag Logo Video Streaming Services: What You Should Know

You Own Blu-ray Discs

If you really love a film or series, it behooves you to pick it up on Blu-ray. Besides the impressive sights and sounds, Blu-ray discs ensure that you'll always have your favorite content readily available. Sadly, video streaming services often remove popular content.

Let’s say you joined HBO Max with the expectation that you’d be able to watch all of the DC Entertainment-based films. At launch, Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight was there for your viewing pleasure. However, Batman Begins and The Dark Knight Rises, the other flicks in Nolan’s Batman trilogy, left HBO Max in September to become a six-month Peacock exclusive. If you only subscribe to HBO Max, you can’t watch either film. 

Netflix has an ongoing, monthly “leaving soon” news section just to let people know which shows are leaving the service. This is a necessary feature, as movies and shows drift between the services, or fall off into the digital void. 

You don’t own the films on streaming services. In fact, you don’t even own them on digital services like Amazon Prime or Apple TV. Some people discovered that the shows and movies they’ve purchased have been delisted from those services, leaving them with nothing. If you own The Dark Knight on Blu-ray, though, you can watch the film whenever you want. Besides, most Blu-rays come with a redemption code for a digital copy that lets you stream a movie if you so choose. It’s a best-of-both-worlds scenario.

Blu-rays are Packed With Extras

If you’re a true cinephile, you love all the extra features that come with physical media. Theatrical trailers, director and actor commentaries, behind-the-scenes documentaries, deleted scenes, storyboards, and concept art are part of the Blu-ray experience. This bonus content is something much harder to find on streaming video services.

For example, the Blu-ray for the recent horror film Overlord includes a 50-minute “Making Of” documentary that’s absent in the film's Amazon Prime Video version. Even The Irishman, a film produced by Netflix, suffers in this regard. All you’ll find is The Irishman In Conversation, a 23-minute conversation between director Martin Scorcese and actors Robert De Niro, Al Pacino, and Joe Pesci. The Blu-ray version, a Criterion Collection release, has that same conversation, plus a “Making Of” documentary, a video essay, a look at the de-aging technology used in the film, and archival footage of interviews with the real-life Frank "The Irishman” Sheeran.

To be fair, Disney+ films have an “Extras” tab bonuses live, and Amazon Prime Video offers a service called X-Ray that drops information about actors in the current. It’s certainly not on par with the extras on many Blu-ray releases. Criterion Collection and a few other boutique Blu-ray publishers include original box art, enhanced packaging, posters, and art books. That packaging, in addition to the care and effort put into the films' presentation, is key to how physical media offers better, complete experiences. 

This Wong Kar Wai set has excellent extras

Convenience Isn’t Everything

If you only care about convenience, then yes, streaming is the way to go. I subscribe to many video streaming services, and use them on a regular basis. Still, Blu-ray discs offer numerous enjoyable benefits and extras. You probably don’t need an Ultra HD Blu-ray to watch It’s a Wonderful Life this holiday season, but there is a fantastic version sourced from the film's original nitrate negative that brings its old film grain back to life.

Streaming will get you through your day-to-day, but the disc will always be there on your media shelf, showing people you have taste and class. (Or not, depending on your movie selection.) And, when your internet goes down, you’ll have lots of disc-based movie and TV content to tide you over until you can continue binging The Queen’s Gambit.

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About Mike Williams

Analyst

For more than a decade, Mike Williams has covered video games, both on the industry and consumer sides. He got his start covering the business dealing of the video game industry at Gamesindustry.biz, before moving to USgamer, where he covered a host of games and game consoles as Reviews Editor. Now he comes to PCMag as an Analyst, bringing those game reviewing skills to bear. When he’s not reviewing games, Mike dives into all forms of entertainment, including comics, movies, television, anime, and the absolute wildness that is Japanese tokusatsu.

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