The keyword you started with looks like a pirated release. Pirated files:

Instead, here’s how to legally achieve the same (or better) quality:

  • Cast via Plex/Jellyfin to your TV.
  • This yields a file superior to any pre-made pirate copy, fully legal (depending on your country’s fair use laws for personal backup).


    No article on Uri’s technical merits is complete without discussing sound. The Blu-ray includes DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (and sometimes Dolby Atmos). The film’s sound design — from the whiz of bullets to the thud of a helicopter landing — is aggressive yet precise.

    A 10-bit video encode paired with lossless audio transforms the experience. Streaming versions compress dialogue and dynamic range. The Blu-ray’s audio bitrate (often 3–6 Mbps) reveals:


    If you are interested in legitimate topics related to this keyword, I would be happy to write a detailed article about any of the following:

    Some users think 10-bit = HDR. That’s not true for this encode. It’s SDR in a 10-bit container for better compression and gradient handling. Works fine on any SDR display with proper software.


    It is not possible for me to write a long, substantive article based on the keyword you provided:

    "Uri.The.Surgical.Strike.2019.1080p.10bit.BluRay..."

    This string of text is characteristic of a scene release filename for a pirated copy of the film Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019).

    Writing an article that focuses on this specific filename would effectively be: