, the film follows Sue, a British filmmaker who travels to India to document the lives of Indian revolutionaries based on her grandfather’s diary. She casts a group of cynical, carefree university students—played by

For collectors who prioritize storage space over sheer pixel count, the encode derived from the BluRay source is the most popular format circulating in archival forums.

Watching Rang De Basanti in 480p today is a retro experience. The softer image hides the outdated CGI of the aircraft crash sequence, but it also crushes the black levels. In the prison scene where Siddharth (Soha Ali Khan) confronts the boys, the shadows in 480p become a black blob. On a BluRay, you can see the contours of their faces in the dim light.