Consider what is lost and what is gained. A compressed release can spread a film wider, allowing viewers in varied geographies and with differing connection speeds to encounter work they otherwise might never see. For many, these versions are entry points — first glances that might lead to festival screenings, director interviews, or pursuing a higher-quality release. Yet the reduction in image detail and dynamic range can also dull cinematographic subtleties: a nuanced shadow, a deliberate frame, a tonal shift in color that a filmmaker labored over may become a whisper rather than a voice.