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In an era of CGI overload, seeing Arnold Schwarzenegger actually strapped to a Harrier jet or Jamie Lee Curtis hanging from a limo over the Seven Mile Bridge is a breath of fresh air. Final Verdict: To Upgrade or Not?

For nearly three decades, fans of explosive action and sharp comedy lived with a glaring gap in their Blu-ray collections. James Cameron’s 1994 masterpiece, True Lies , starring Arnold Schwarzenegger in his prime, was famously trapped in a format prison. While lesser action flicks received lavish 4K restorations and special edition DVDs, Harry Tasker’s double life languished in non-anamorphic, grainy standard definition purgatory.

The new finally bridges this gap, offering both digital and physical options:

The remaster is controversial among fans because of its use of AI-assisted upscaling and heavy Digital Noise Reduction (DNR). While it offers extreme sharpness and "eye-popping" detail in backgrounds, critics have noted that some facial textures can appear "waxy" or "plastic". Film Background & Legacy Directed by James Cameron

When the remaster finally arrived, eagle-eyed fans immediately noticed the digital cleanup. The infamous "wire removal" in the horse-stable fight? Cleaner. The matte lines on the exploding mall facade? Almost invisible. But importantly, Cameron didn't DNR (Digital Noise Reduce) the soul out of it. The film retains a healthy layer of organic grain, giving it that gritty, 90s photochemical warmth that modern digitally shot actioners lack.