The writers are encoding emotional debt early. Lois’s miscarriage revelation (S1) echoes here, but the episode quickly switches to present-day 4:4:4 chroma subsampling – bright Kansas greens, the Kent farm’s golden hour glow. 2. Video Track ( -c:v libx265 ) Switching to H.265 makes sense for this show. Why? Because Superman & Lois thrives in high-efficiency, complex scenes – motion prediction for flying sequences, grain retention for gritty Lane-Kent arguments.
He’s benched from football, feeling powerless. The writers are clearly setting up X-Kryptonite as a cheat code for powers – but this episode wisely holds off. Instead, we get a beautiful 2-minute montage of him fixing his truck with Jordan. No dialogue, just wrench sounds and a shared beer. That’s lossless storytelling . 6. Encoding Flags & Recommendations | Flag | Setting | Why it works here | |------|---------|------------------| | -preset slower | Slower encoding = better compression | The episode rewards patience. Slow-burn family drama before the punch-up. | | -crf 18 | Near-lossless | Preserves grain in night scenes (e.g., Clark & John Henry Irons at the mine). | | -movflags +faststart | Fast streaming start | The cold open hooks you immediately – no buffering allowed. |
Clark vs. Monster at the Shuster Mines. The camera shake mimics a corrupted interlace pattern. Smart choice – makes the fight feel wrong , un-encoded by normal physics.