FFmpeg won't help you steal a horse or fake a psychiatrist's signature, but it will make your digital Brassic collection a lot easier to manage.
Get-ChildItem -Filter "*.mkv" | ForEach-Object ffmpeg -i $_.Name -c:v libx265 -crf 23 -preset medium -c:a aac -b:a 128k -c:s copy ("compressed_" + $_.Name) brassic s05 ffmpeg
-vf "eq=contrast=1.1:brightness=0.05" This lifts the shadows just enough so you can actually see the stunt work without losing the moody vibe. Using the command above, I turned an 18GB Brassic Season 5 folder into a 7.4GB folder. The quality? Vinnie’s grin is still sharp. The car chases still pop. And best of all—no buffering. FFmpeg won't help you steal a horse or
Welcome to the club. Let’s talk about using to wrestle those Hawley misadventures into shape. The Problem: S05E01 is Beautiful, But Bloated Let’s be honest— Brassic looks gorgeous. The cinematography of the Lancashire countryside mixed with those frenetic heist scenes makes for high-bitrate video. But a 50-minute episode of Vinnie and the lads shouldn't require a 5GB download. The quality
for f in *.mkv; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -c:v libx265 -crf 23 -preset medium -c:a aac -b:a 128k -c:s copy "compressed_$f"; done If you’ve watched S05E03, you know there’s a scene in a dark cellar that looks like a black screen on most compressed video. If your encode crushes the blacks, add this filter: