The 1968 Best Picture winner—a three-ton, Technicolor, sing-along adaptation of Charles Dickens—has become an unlikely darling of the .

Why? Because it’s the ultimate stress test. Most Best Picture winners from the late 60s were shot on high-speed 35mm stock. Oliver! was different. Director Carol Reed shot it on Todd-AO 70mm —a format so massive and detailed that a single frame contains roughly 12 times the information of standard 35mm.

"Please, sir, I want some more." (More bitrate, that is.) I can write a mock "Encoder’s Diary" for the infamous "Food, Glorious Food" sequence, or compare its x264 profile to The Sound of Music . Just say the word.

As the camera cranes up over the London rooftops and the morning light hits the straw, steam, and fabric—all while the music swells into a six-part harmony—standard compression algorithms panic . The mix of high-frequency audio (tinkling piano, soprano voices) and low-frequency visual data (brick textures, fog) creates a "bitrate war."

In the dark corners of private torrent trackers and Plex server libraries, a strange juxtaposition lives on. You’ll find The Dark Knight in 4K HDR. You’ll find Dune: Part Two in 2160p Remux. And then... you’ll find Oliver!