The mention of "DTS" is critical. Jurassic Park was the first film to use DTS (Digital Experience) technology. The "Cinema DTS" audio refers to the original theatrical audio tracks—often sourced from the actual laser-disc-sized discs that were shipped to theaters in 1993 to sync with the film projectors. Unlike modern home theater remixes, which sometimes alter sound effects or balance, the Cinema DTS track offers the raw, aggressive, and dynamic soundstage originally engineered by Gary Rydstrom. The Significance of the "Work"
The grain structure is present and correct, giving the image a tactile quality. The computer-generated dinosaurs, which were cutting-edge in '93, actually blend better in this gritty, grainy presentation. The rawness of the film stock hides the seams of the early CGI better than the hyper-clarity of modern 4K masters. The colors are punchy and slightly washed out in that nostalgic print-way, lacking the teal-and-orange push of modern re-grades. It looks like cinema, not a video game.
The “Jurassic Park 35mm 1080p version cinema DTS superwide open matte work” is not for everyone. It is for the purist who wants to sit in their home theater, dim the lights, and hear the rustle of the film projector in their mind. It’s for those who remember seeing the film in 1993 and have spent thirty years trying to get back to that feeling.
: While it contains scratches and cue marks, it avoids the artificial sharpening found in modern remasters.