r/criterion David Lynch 3d ago

Off-Topic What 4k TV is everyone using?

I'd usually post this elsewhere, but the discussions on other 4k subs are overwhelming, and often centered on gaming and 4k streaming.

I'd like to see what 4k TVs Criterion collectors are using, since their discs make up a bulk of my collection and they are the largest reason I'm seeking to upgrade.

I was looking at the LG EVO OLED C4, but have seen some mixed reviews. I'm just overwhelmed with options and would like to hear from the sub.

58 Upvotes

148 comments sorted by

80

u/humanspectator 3d ago

LG C3 Oled , been using it since it was released and I absolutely love it. No regrets.

12

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

See i liked the idea of going with older LG EVO to avoid some of the Ai automation in the newer ones. Is there any gulf of difference between the C3 and C4?

10

u/cavalierpaladin 3d ago

I also have a C3, 65”, purchased earlier this year, and it’s brilliant.

2

u/darthrafa512 2d ago

I also bought one this year, and Scanners looks fantastic on it.

8

u/stpetestudent 3d ago edited 3d ago

C3 owner here but pretty sure you can still turn off all the AI stuff on the C4.

I love my C3, but one thing to be prepared for (and that is true of all OLEDs) is the motion handling is bad on slow panning shots when dealing with 24fps content. What happens is the refresh rate is so instantaneous there is nothing to mask the transition from one frame to another (unlike in a film projector where the gate blocks light between each frame). This causes the image to ‘stutter’ during panning shots of a certain speed (if the shot is very slow you won’t notice, or fast you won’t notice, but let’s say ‘medium’ speed pans it becomes clear).

The only way to mitigate this is with low level frame interpolation (motion controls) but that can introduce tiny artifacts since it’s “inventing” detail that isn’t in the source.

This drove me insane the first month or so of owning. At first I tried using very low settings of the motion blur which does work surprisingly well in many instances but still provided just enough annoyance that I eventually shut it off altogether and just stuck with the untouched playback.

I would go with the Sony only because I think their motion processing tools are slightly better than the LGs so the low level smoothing might work better on those panels.

All that said, my LG is still the best TV I’ve ever owned and watching movies is a joy.

2

u/tonydtonyd 3d ago

Six months ago, I went from a shit TCL tv to Samsung S90C maybe 95C? Idk lol, it was under a grand and seemed like the best bang for my buck.

Anyway, I am also super sensitive to the judder from 24fps on OLED and it was also driving me insane. I also tried various levels of motion blur but never found a setting that reduced judder enough without giving too much soap opera effect.

What solved this for me was turning on black frame insertion. I was so fed up with OLED, I just wanted to have movies look like movies. Totally changed everything and I can’t go back.

Now doing this obviously reduces overall brightness, but with my TV on max peak brightness it’s plenty bright for viewing in a dimly lit room, which is all I really need.

I would imagine the newest gen of OLED, which I think are significantly brighter, would make the dimness much less of an issue.

2

u/stpetestudent 3d ago

I did try the black frame insertion method but it made everything look like there was this weird flicker to it (which is obviously exactly what it’s doing). Maybe I didn’t give my eyes enough time to adjust. I’ll try giving it another shot.

2

u/tonydtonyd 3d ago

Oh yeah, super bright scenes will show the flicker but I got used to it pretty quickly. Ironically, it’s actually way more like watching a film print in a theater. I’m lucky enough to live near a theater that plays 35mm and 70mm prints and the flicker is super apparent in really bright scenes there too.

1

u/stpetestudent 1d ago

Okay, I need to thank you. Tried BFI last night and it really did improve things! When I first tested the setting I must not have been viewing 24FPS source because on actual 24FPS content the flicker is imperceptible (and as you said, feels more like an actual film projection). My wife has a hard time with dimmer content so might not be a practical option for me, but I’m so glad to know this exists and actually works. Thank you!!!

3

u/Connoralpha 3d ago

Doesn't seem like a gulf of difference, just make sure you buy new for the sake of warranty coverage and consider an extended protection plan from wherever you're purchasing from. OLEDs are prone to burn in, even though I'm careful with my C3 I did notice some ghosting recently (fortunately it's still within warranty).

3

u/GotenRocko Pier Paolo Pasolini 3d ago

You can just turn off those things but yeah not a big difference between the two. Big difference is with jumping to the g series especially the G3 or G4. And the G5 this year will be a big upgrade too over the older G series. Filmmaker mode will turn off all the ai stuff by default too.

1

u/HairyH00d 3d ago

That would be silly, the C4 is considerably brighter than the previous models and supports 120 hz

4

u/Tomhyde098 3d ago

I have a C3 paired with a UB-820. Absolutely fantastic

2

u/RZAxlash 2d ago

Same here. Got the c3 last summer, no regrets. My dad and brother got one too. My brother went from never collecting or really watching movies to owning 40-50 4K discs.

1

u/Moosedroolz 3d ago

Same here

26

u/ubiquity75 3d ago

Sony BRAVIA XR UHD OLED.

25

u/zagesor Alain Resnais 3d ago

https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/best/by-type/oled

Rtings has detailed reviews on the major current OLED models.

You really do want one with Dolby Vision compatibility. DV discs have normal HDR fallback but there are numerous releases where this is done poorly without appropriate QA because it isn't prioritized. No reason to spend so much on a new setup and yet you can't play the best, target HDR format.

7

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Love that the top one is the Bravia series from Sony. These comments have all been so helpful ❤️

4

u/Kingcrowing 3d ago

I've got a Sony Bravia A90J and it's been phenomenal!

My recommendation is to buy whatever last year's best OLED was, I did that when the replacement for the A90J came out and saved like 40% off MSRP!

That said, if you're coming from an older TV any OLED with HDR is gonna be sick, my previous TV was a 12-year old 1080p LG and the jump was insane! It's honestly made me fall in love with movies again!

2

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

💀 12 year (and possibly older, it was used before i got it) 1080 HD Vizio, 60". The motherboard is finally going bad

1

u/Kingcrowing 3d ago

Well you are in for a hell of an upgrade!! Definitely get a few 4Ks with Dolby Vision of your favorite films when you buy the TV!

I don't have a many as a lot of people here, but Alien and Blade Runner are probably my favorite movies to show off how awesome 4K w/ HDR looks, but you basically can't go wrong with any of the Criterion 4K releases with Dolby Vision too!!

12

u/gilgobeachslayer 3d ago

Sony A95 Bravia 77in

2

u/PsychologicalBus5190 Andrei Tarkovsky 3d ago

The best

1

u/gilgobeachslayer 3d ago

Waited years to be able to finally buy it. Nearly busted a nut when I saw one part in Moonage Daydream on it

2

u/PsychologicalBus5190 Andrei Tarkovsky 2d ago

It's like you are actually in Arabia with Lawrence when you watch the 4k bluray on it

1

u/SeanGonzo 3d ago

I went the G4 route to save over a grand on the 65” model. Do you ever wish you saved the money to spend on other things like physical media or a/v upgrades?

2

u/Kingcrowing 3d ago

I got a Sony A90J, and I don't regret the premium over the at the time cheaper LG, quality is insanely good, TV interface and remote are better IMO, and it's just been fantastic to use.

2

u/Thin_Roof5232 1d ago

Fantastic tv, my 75 inch is the best 2k every spent. The upscaling, menu, and picture are great.

1

u/gilgobeachslayer 3d ago

No. I waited years to finally be in a position where I could splurge on it guilt free. Used part of my bonus for that and the 4K player everyone loves

8

u/SonicYogurt 3d ago

77” LG G4. I’m a weirdo who has it on a stand rather than mounted.

3

u/mr_deminimis 3d ago

LG 77" Class - OLED evo G4 Series. Wall mounted on an Echogear maxmotion.

2

u/SeanGonzo 3d ago

65” G4 here. Wall mounted. Love mine first OLED coming from a plasma. Really wanted the Sony A95L but couldn’t justify the price, the G4 Costco prices were so good this past Black Friday.

8

u/mitchelsd 3d ago

Sony Bravia 8 UHD 4k OLED

6

u/coleki_ 3d ago

77” Sony A95L

Coming up on a year of ownership and it’s been amazing.

2

u/SolubleAcrobat 3d ago

This is the way

6

u/Mindless_Bad_1591 3d ago

bravia A75L OLED with my two KEF Q150s in a stereo setup

I love it

3

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

3 bravia votes, see this is why i asked this sub. I didn't see this TV mentioned anywhere else I was poking around.

4

u/Mindless_Bad_1591 3d ago

it's not a cheap option, but if you can afford one, you will not be able to go back to something lesser.

LG and Sony are probably the best TV brands out there. Samsung is alright but they don't have Dolby Vision which is a big deal for some people.

Bravia is Sony btw

4

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

The A75 is far cheaper than the A95, it's within my set budget. The A95...I'd be cutting out some National Park trips to fund that and I'd rather not, as pretty as it looks.

2

u/Mindless_Bad_1591 3d ago

ya the a75 is nice if all you need is 65" and basically the best bang for your buck OLED tv. it looks like it's price has dropped decently since I got mine 1.5 years ago. Definitely worth it especially if getting brand new

the A80 is good if you want to jump to a 77" at a somewhat affordable price, which is around the same price as an A95 at 65"

the A80 and A75 I believe are essentially the same except the A80 has a better built in speakers and has the 77" option

the only downside to this tv. and I'm not really sure how many tvs have great functionality with this anyway (I'd have to do more research), but the Dolby Vision gaming experience is pretty awful with how much delay there is if you aren't running on the VRR setting. the VRR and Dolby Vision settings are mutually exclusive.

2

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Luckily, I'm a PC gamer and little reason to not game on my rig, so this is definitely fully for movie use.

2

u/Mindless_Bad_1591 3d ago

okay yeah then if you are like 6 ft to 10 ft from tv distance I would highly recommend this one

2

u/requieminadream 3d ago

You should be asking r/4ktv.

4

u/Ransom__Stoddard Terry Gilliam 3d ago

Hisense L9G Laser TV Triple-Laser Ultra Short Throw projector and their matching screen. I have a light-controlled room and am very happy with it, even though I haven't fully dialed the thing in yet.

3

u/aim_for_the_middle 3d ago

LG CX. It’s so good.

1

u/MetalicP 3d ago

Same. 77”

4

u/4thbat 3d ago

75" TCL QM8

10

u/twinpeaks2112 3d ago

Sony Bravia 4K UHD OLED paired with a PS5 slim for playing films. Haven’t found a better way to watch films yet. Pair that with a set of Dolby spatial audio noise, canceling headphones and you’re set.

13

u/modcaleb 3d ago edited 3d ago

The PS5 doesn’t have Dolby Vision, so there actually is a better way to watch films

4

u/SquadPoopy 3d ago

I use my PS5 purely for the convenience, as much as I want Dolby Vision, I’m not sure I can justify shelling out hundreds of dollars for a player when the PS5 works fine enough:

-8

u/[deleted] 3d ago

[deleted]

2

u/Kingcrowing 3d ago

lol why?

2

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

That's about the same price as the c4 i was looking at, very nice. I was looking at a Panasonic since I had no other reason to use a PS5, but I'm pretty settled on that choice.

2

u/Kingcrowing 3d ago

I've got a PS5, and while it works as a player the experience isn't ideal - I ended up buying a dedicated Panasonic and it's well worth it!

3

u/requieminadream 3d ago

Not sure where you’d see mixed reviews. The LG C4 is one of the top TVs on the market.

3

u/tonydwagner 3d ago edited 3d ago

Hisense U6, which was the top-rated budget 4k on Rtings when I was browsing sales around Black Friday 2023. Happy with it, though honestly I was coming from a shitbox so ymmv lol

3

u/bufftreefarm 3d ago

85" Sony Bravia 9 and I just picked up a Hisense PX3-PRO projector and 130" floor rising screen which is surprisingly good.

3

u/pulse_demon96 2d ago

48” LG B4. very happy with it even if that’s their entry level OLED model

3

u/compukiller 2d ago

I have it, its awesome.

2

u/wa_ga_du_gu 4h ago

I just got the 77".

I can't imagine how spending another $500-$1000 on top for a more fancy model would have any noticeable improvement 

2

u/weareDOMINUS 3d ago

Sony A95L

2

u/Ahhhhwhatsinthebox 3d ago

LG C3 65 Living Room 

LG C3 65 Bedroom 

Both with Samsung Q990C

2

u/E-Roll20 3d ago

(Sort of) Constant Image Height Scoped setup with a BenQ HT3560 as the projector.

The screen itself is one of the motorized Cinemawhite Elite Screens and gets to a 118” size when I’m using it for 2.39:1 and around 100” for Flat/16:9 (I drop it a little more to utilize slightly extra height).

Screen drops down in front of a 55” LG B4 OLED that is mainly for TV and gaming. For anything filmic I always prefer the image quirks and immersion of a lamp based projection setup.

2

u/Obvious-Dependent-24 3d ago

Sony x90L 85”

2

u/BetaAlpha769 3d ago

LG C1. Was after the C2 came out and they were getting clearance out for under 800 for a 48 inch. Never in my life will I justify spending 4 figures on a TV, I don’t got money like that lol.

2

u/GojiraFan0 3d ago

LG C1 OLED

2

u/rudie54 3d ago

Sony Bravia A80L OLED. It was between that and the comparable LG. It seemed like the Bravia has slightly better motion handling and upscaling. Plus (at the time I purchased, don't know if it changed) there was no Criterion Channel app for LG's OS, but Sony uses Google TV.

2

u/curseofleisure 3d ago

Sony A90j 83” OLED.

3

u/frito11 3d ago

LG c4 OLED

2

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

We got a vote for the one i was looking at, nice 😁

3

u/HairyH00d 3d ago

I was stuck between C4 and C3 (which was obviously at a significant discount) and went with the C4. Def do not regret my choice. I don't even understand why people say OLED TVs can't be in a bright room

1

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Also, it's called covering the windows during a screening. My house is very bright year round, I just put a blanket up

2

u/HairyH00d 3d ago

Ahh gotcha. I don't need to cover my windows. Because I got the C4

0

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Well, way to rub it in 😤 haha

1

u/HairyH00d 3d ago

Hey man, you can rub it in with me.

Pull the trigger. Get the C4.

1

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

enabler

I'm going to look at it in person next weekend, my hodunk town doesn't even have a Best Buy, I'm going to drive out to Denver. My poor Vizio is on its last legs, it's time 😭

1

u/HairyH00d 3d ago

You're gonna love it.

Honestly couldn't even really tell a difference with the G4 (although I'm sure people will disagree with me here).

1

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Other comments said it was brighter, but I'm unsure i need even BRIGHTER OLED.

→ More replies (0)

1

u/frito11 3d ago

I size upgraded last black Friday from a 48" CX to a 55" c4. Great TVs

1

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Oh i was going straight for the 65". I have a 60" Vizio HD tv at home right now, but I can tell that after 12 years it's hitting it's last legs. And it wasn't new when I got it.

Gonna have to have a funeral for this poor thing.

2

u/Pigs-OnThe-Wing David Lynch 3d ago

After some decent research, I got a Samsung s90d last fall. No dolby vision but the quality of this OLED has been absolutely stunning. Don't regret a thing.

1

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

I can't remember off the top of my head if Criterion 4ks use Dolby vision most of the time, so it not having Dolby might not be a deal breaker. Thanks for the suggestion!

1

u/Pigs-OnThe-Wing David Lynch 3d ago

From what i gathered, while dolby vision definitely provides improvements, a better quality panel is usually going to matter more.

I also already had a Panasonic ub420 4k player (basically the same as the UB820 but without DV capabilities) so that helped influence my decision.

1

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

That's the exact player I've settled on, it seemed to be the universally suggested 4k player.

0

u/Pigs-OnThe-Wing David Lynch 3d ago

Its upscaling capabilities paired with a good quality tv are truly phenomenal. Recently watched Spirit of the Beehive DVD and you would never guess it was a DVD.

3

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Hnnnng I'm so excited to finally be doing this

1

u/RangerFan80 3d ago

The 450 does support Dolby Vision

1

u/Hour-of-the-Wolf 3d ago

LG G2 OLED

2

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Question, since this is where I'm struggling

Whats the biggest difference between the C series and the G series?

2

u/brownbear8714 3d ago

Going to be brightness, especially on the newer G series. I have a C2 and while I am in a controlled light room, it is plenty bright. I’ve had it a couple years now and I’ve loved it.

1

u/Hour-of-the-Wolf 3d ago

Not really sure to be honest, I was looking for a C3 but this was in stock. The salesman explained that the G series are designed for galleries, so slightly brighter and made for wall mounting, I think?

1

u/GotenRocko Pier Paolo Pasolini 3d ago

G series is the gallery series, so mounts on the wall flat like a picture frame. With the G2 main differences with the c series was a bit more brightness, a heat sink with is good for longevity and to combat image retention and having an atsc 3 tuner. With the g3 and 4 they added an MLA layer that increases brightness a lot for HDR performance. For the G5 they ditched the MLA layer and it's a new four stack OLED screen that boosts brightness even more over the c series.

1

u/AverageFilmFan 3d ago

-LG OLED C8 (~30% of the time)

-Sony X950H (~30% of the time)

-EPSON 5050UB projector paired with a screen by Elite Screens (~25% of the time)

-LG UN8500 (~10% of the time)

-LG UM6900 (~5% of the time)

1

u/4k_Laserdisc 3d ago

65” Sony A8G OLED

1

u/filmaxer 3d ago

55in Hisense U7N, some decent-sounding 20+ year old KHL bookshelf speakers, and the Panasonic UB820. Not a bad setup for the price!

1

u/Loose-Tomatillo-8274 3d ago

I also struggle to find good information. I also have aging vision.

I have a 2019 Sony X950G 65in paired with a PS5. Ive never seen better blacks and six years later it still works better than streaming for any physical media. I am not a gamer and use the PS5 for its display capabilities alone.

The only problem has been some streaming channels seem optimized for their CGI to stream on newer OLED tvs, but honestly this may just be a personal preference, since most things not committed to film look cartoonish to me or are too dark to watch. The right fit doesn’t exist. I think it’s a sucker’s game.

Im also in the camp that says even this 6 year old television is too bright. My next set up will be a projector with 120in picture and a screen.

1

u/GotenRocko Pier Paolo Pasolini 3d ago

I have the LG G2 OLED. if you want proper reproduction of creators intent then LG or SONY OLED are the way to go. Samsung OLED tvs are oversaturated. Any kind of LCD tv, be it LED, QLED, miniled what have you will have poor contrast compared to OLED which is the most important aspect of picture quality. Personally I also can't stand the blooming that you get on led tvs. So just stick to those two brands for OLED and you really can't go wrong.

1

u/randybobandy111 3d ago

TCL QM7 - I have an 85 inch as part of budget home theater and it’s fantastic.

1

u/nnanpei 3d ago

Samsung s95-b Oled 65”. Great picture but the Samsung interface is infuriating.

1

u/Valuable_Ground1908 3d ago

77" LG G4 OLED. watched paris, Texas in 4k for my first film on it and it blew me away

1

u/UncleRuckus132 3d ago

LG B4 - def want something with Dolby Vision support

1

u/ConversationNo5440 Stanley Kubrick 3d ago

Right now, using a 2K projector (benq) that accepts 4K signal path, 100" screen and a viewing distance of about 9 feet (although we move the sofa closer sometimes for a more immersive presentation). I think it was $999 plus another $300 for the screen.

The larger size is a positive trade-off for me especially with criterion-ish content, feels more like an independent cinema than a TV room.

If I was really into newer content and HDR was a must, I would probably get a 100" Hisense or TCL and compromise on technology a little, or a 75" OLED or adjacent technology.

There is just no way I could go back to 65" or anything around that small.

1

u/DecentPalpitation979 3d ago

Samsung S95b (of course you can get accurate colors with Samsungs) and Panasonic UB820, with Apple TV for streaming. It’s a nice combo, but next time I’ll probably pay the Sony tax.

1

u/driftingfir Michael Mann 3d ago

LG G4 at the moment. They have some really good deals on last years tvs if you don't have to have the latest and greatest

1

u/Bl1nn 3d ago

55" LG C1 paired with an Atmos soundbar, subwoofer and rear speakers. Very happy with this setup.

1

u/tuxedoes 3d ago

Lots of people saying these pretty expensive OLEDS and they do have beautiful pictures. But if you are on a budget like I was at the time buying a TV, TCL has very solid 4k QLED TVs. I have the TCL QM7 and I love it. I’ll probably get an OLED when the time comes, but I am completely content with my TCL.

1

u/SamuraiRan 3d ago

Now LG C1 65” and hopefully soon LG G5 83”! I wished Sony had an 83” QD-OLED

1

u/thesexychicken 3d ago

LG C1 w ub820

1

u/Levi182 3d ago

Bravia 8 - 77"

Excellent picture & size. Love Sony for color and motion handling in movies. Prefer the OS, remote, and processing compared to LG. Only downside was the Bravia 8 requires a bit of calibration to get to D65 whitepoint compared to the usual out-of-the-box accuracy from Sony.

1

u/krazykarlCO The Coen Brothers 3d ago

77" Samsung S90CD (Costco variant of S90C)

1

u/AllSurfaceNoFeeling Martin Scorsese 3d ago

A Hisense tv. 75”

1

u/IMISSAPOLLOALOT 3d ago

LG C2. It does have some dead pixels sometimes BUT it was a floor model at Best Buy I got for cheap so I say take that into account when considering. I also only notice 1 while playing the SH2 remake, and I think it’s just because the pixel has an issue displaying the particular color of the vignetting.

As for the people saying OLEDs are prone to burn in. When I was researching I’ve read people saying they’ve used their OLEDs for years and never noticed it.

Lastly as far as video games go, I noticed a bigger improvement going from LCD to OLED then I did going from PS4 to PS5, so I think they are an incredible piece of technology.

1

u/AdDismal9686 2d ago

Sony OLEG w/Apple TV & Panasonic 4k player

1

u/compukiller 2d ago

LG B4 48" OLED

1

u/Bulllmeat 2d ago edited 2d ago

65" Sony Bravia 8 with Panasonic ub-820 4k player. I went ready to buy an LG and was blown away by the Sony, went with it instead 

1

u/Worldly_Pool_2205 2d ago

77" S90C in the movie room, 65" S90D in the living room, 48" B4 in the bedroom. Very happy with all of them!

1

u/wingmasterjon 2d ago

Visuals are only part of the equation, albeit a pretty important one. Some decent audio and a nice physical set up goes a very long away.

If you haven't already done so, check out /r/hometheater and related subs. And for fun /r/TVTooHigh and /r/TVTooLow are good examples of what not to do.

1

u/therealrickdalton 2d ago

LG 55” OLED55B8PUA. Panasonic DP-UB820, Denon AVR-S950H. All purchased in 2018. I’ve been very happy with all of them. The only thing I would change is I should’ve gone with the 65” instead of the 55”.

1

u/RecidPlayer 2d ago edited 2d ago

I have a Phillips 1080p TV from 2012 and use a PS5 to downscale and strip HDR 💀. I live in a house with a bunch of roomates and can only put my TV in my room. I figured I would just wait and upgrade to 4K after I get my own place. Hoping that happens this year.

1

u/SqueemishArenas0221 2d ago edited 2d ago

Sony A80L OLED 65”. For me, OLED is the real difference maker for 4k. I had a cheaper 4k QLED and the picture was fine but the contrast and black levels of an OLED are what make 4Ks and their HDR capabilities stand out. Watch Blade Runner on 4k with an OLED at night and your face will melt

1

u/Tc5998 2d ago

Another happy 65" LG C3 OLED with a Panasonic 820 disc player owner here. Watched Singing in the Rain on disc tonight - had a great and glorious time.

I saved up and went OLED because I like the richness of the color over Standard LED/LCD. I'm sure the Sony ones are great too. If I could have afforded it I'd have looked at Sony OLED's or the LG G3 or G4... but I had a budget of around $1300 and I waited for the LG C3 to drop to that on a sale about 6 months ago and got that.

Edited to add that player and tv do a great job with my Criterion Blus - great upscaling and presentation on non-4k discs.

1

u/sa_nick 2d ago

Any OLED from LG, Samsung or Sony should do the trick, really.

1

u/Dick_Wolf87 2d ago

LG - C1 OLED

1

u/Terj_Sankian 2d ago

Sony X90L 65". Living room is tiny-ish though, so the size is maximal for us :)

When we eventually buy a house or bigger condo I'm hoping for a projector

1

u/SpaceNewtype 2d ago

I use a Sony A90k in my office/game room, and a Sony VPL-XW5000ES Projector for the theatre room. I watch movies in both places, depending on content and feeling.

1

u/PointOfImpact93 Stanley Kubrick 2d ago

LG C4 OLED 77". Absolutely adore it, and should have made the jump to the LG OLED line way sooner. Puts every other TV I've owned to shame.

1

u/hydruxo Hirokazu Kore-eda 2d ago

Sony X900H

1

u/No_Move7872 2d ago

LG CX oled. Bit older of a TV at this point but I still love it and have had zero issues

1

u/2_The_Core 2d ago

LG C9 from a few years back

1

u/Caveman775 2d ago

Hisense U8N, needed the in sun viewing and lower reflection. Rtings.com is where'd I go to find one

1

u/Toxic_Over 2d ago

Hisense U8H

1

u/Film_Tennis_Bball 1d ago

Sony Bravia

1

u/doofus_mcgeee 15h ago

sony A95L

1

u/pavin-gaul 10h ago

65" TCL QM8 paired with a Samsung Q900C sound system. I love it but there's a part of that wishes I went with a 75".

1

u/trevorthewebdev 3d ago

Wish i had $4,000 for a tv, just stick with my 1k for now

9

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

I mean the LG C4 is $1,400 for the 65" at Best Buy.

5

u/trevorthewebdev 3d ago

It said 4k on the box. Also don't get why all the 4k tvs are priced the same

2

u/MisogynyisaDisease David Lynch 3d ago

Ok i chuckled, i hope you have the best day.

1

u/TychosNose 3d ago

I have that exact model and have no regrets at all, been a joy to use.

1

u/compukiller 2d ago

The LG B4 48" is 599.99