Sony may be quietly waving goodbye to physical media — the company has confirmed it will stop producing PlayStation game discs in 2028 and recently pulled access to more than 500 films and TV shows bought through the PlayStation Store in the UK — but the disc-collecting faithful have plenty to celebrate this summer. Three heavyweight 4K Blu-ray releases are landing in July, and they are exactly the kind of reference-grade discs that earn a permanent spot on the shelf.
Kill Bill: The Whole Bloody Affair gets the deluxe treatment it always deserved. Lionsgate Limited is putting out a 4-disc 4K Ultra HD/Blu-ray/Digital Collector’s Edition on July 28, 2026, priced at US$69.99. Tarantino’s saga arrives in a 2.40:1 widescreen presentation with Dolby Vision and English 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio. The full runtime clocks in at 253 minutes, split across two discs (112 minutes and 141 minutes). If you want a genuine torture test for your home cinema kit, the sword-fight showdowns and stylised gore here will do it.
Before that, Michael arrives on July 14, 2026. Also from Lionsgate Limited, this 4K UHD/Blu-ray/Digital Collector’s Edition ships with a 50-page photo booklet and carries a price of US$49.99. It runs 127 minutes and is presented in 1.85:1 widescreen with Dolby Vision and an English Dolby Atmos soundtrack — the kind of object-based mix that gives an Atmos speaker layout something to chew on.
For binge-watchers, the big one is Stranger Things: The Complete Series. Arrow Video is bringing all five seasons — 42 episodes in total — to physical media for the first time, arriving July 28, 2026. It comes in both Special and Deluxe editions across 4K UHD and Blu-ray, marking the debut complete boxed set for a show that has become a fixture of streaming-era pop culture. Owning the whole thing outright, licensing agreements be damned, is a satisfying counterpoint to the disappearing-library problem plaguing digital storefronts.
The appeal is simple and stubborn: 4K Blu-ray still delivers picture and sound quality that outclasses even the best streaming services, with higher bitrates, lossless audio and no risk of a title vanishing from your collection overnight. In a week where Sony reminded everyone how fragile digital ownership really is, these three releases feel less like nostalgia and more like insurance.
Whether you’re chasing Tarantino’s uncut vision, a fresh Atmos mix or the Hawkins gang in one tidy box, July is shaping up to be a strong month for anyone who still likes to hold their movies in their hands.