State of the Arts has been taking you on location with the most creative people in New Jersey and beyond since 1981. The New York and Mid-Atlantic Emmy Award-winning series features documentary shorts about an extraordinary range of artists and visits New Jersey’s best performance spaces. State of the Arts is on the frontlines of the creative and cultural worlds of New Jersey.
State of the Arts is a cornerstone program of NJ PBS, with episodes co-produced by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts and Stockton University, in cooperation with PCK Media. The series also airs on WNET and ALL ARTS.
On this week's episode... Artist, historian and bestselling author Nell Irvin Painter on her book I Just Keep Talking, a collection of her essays interspersed with her art. Also on this week’s episode, in 1974, high school friends Phil Buehler and Steve Siegel rowed out to explore the ruins of Ellis Island and make a film. With the film’s re-release in the NY Times OpDocs series, Phil and Steve revisit the island after 50 years. And at Two River Theater in Red Bank, the world premiere of The Scarlet Letter, Kate Hamill’s stage adaptation of Hawthorne’s classic tale.
A compression standard that provides high visual quality at a significantly lower file size than the older x264. or a specific technical spec sheet for this release?
This is the naming convention for a digital media file. The film in question is the acclaimed 2014 South Korean action-crime thriller (Korean title: Kkeut-kka-ji-gan-da ). A.Hard.Day.2014.1080p.10bit.BluRay.HIN-KOR.x265...
A secondary dubbed audio track included for South Asian markets, where South Korean thrillers have gained an immense cult following over the past decade. The Enduring Legacy and Global Remakes A compression standard that provides high visual quality
A high-bitrate H.264 file might require 10–15 GB of space to look flawless. An x265 encode can match or beat that visual clarity at a fraction of the file size (typically 3–6 GB), making it ideal for digital archiving. The film in question is the acclaimed 2014
In the landscape of modern cinema, few films capture the sheer, sweaty-palmed terror of a single bad decision snowballing into an apocalypse quite like Kim Seong-hun’s 2014 masterpiece, A Hard Day . The filename “A.Hard.Day.2014.1080p.10bit.BluRay” suggests a high-definition technical artifact, but to engage with the film is to experience a low-definition moral universe—one where the lines between right and wrong blur into a frantic, muddy smear. Far from a standard police procedural, A Hard Day is a tightly wound clockwork of irony, black comedy, and brutal action that interrogates the fragile architecture of a corrupt conscience.
A compression standard that provides high visual quality at a significantly lower file size than the older x264. or a specific technical spec sheet for this release?
This is the naming convention for a digital media file. The film in question is the acclaimed 2014 South Korean action-crime thriller (Korean title: Kkeut-kka-ji-gan-da ).
A secondary dubbed audio track included for South Asian markets, where South Korean thrillers have gained an immense cult following over the past decade. The Enduring Legacy and Global Remakes
A high-bitrate H.264 file might require 10–15 GB of space to look flawless. An x265 encode can match or beat that visual clarity at a fraction of the file size (typically 3–6 GB), making it ideal for digital archiving.
In the landscape of modern cinema, few films capture the sheer, sweaty-palmed terror of a single bad decision snowballing into an apocalypse quite like Kim Seong-hun’s 2014 masterpiece, A Hard Day . The filename “A.Hard.Day.2014.1080p.10bit.BluRay” suggests a high-definition technical artifact, but to engage with the film is to experience a low-definition moral universe—one where the lines between right and wrong blur into a frantic, muddy smear. Far from a standard police procedural, A Hard Day is a tightly wound clockwork of irony, black comedy, and brutal action that interrogates the fragile architecture of a corrupt conscience.