It depends how the audio and video are encoded (the codecs), the bitrate (or quality) of the encoding, the movie's length and the amount of movement within the video (encoding typically only encodes key frames and the differences between frames rather than every frame). Generally speaking, a dual-layer DVD movie could be anything up to 8.5 GB in size including all extras, menus, languages and so on. The same movie optimised for BluRay will be anything up to 50 GB in size, but typically in the region of 20-30 GB (excluding extras).
1GB (gigabyte) contains 1024 MB (megabyte).
A 4K movie can range from 50 to 100 gigabytes in size, depending on the length and quality of the movie.
5 GB
GB? You mean gay boys? OVER 9000
you can watch Japanese movie on TV.
it just depends on how much movement is going on, for example if there is an explosion every 5 minets its going to be alot but most of the time it will be about 1.5 gigabytes Slightly off. A film I made that was 1 hour and 7 minutes in length was 11 Gigabytes. So a 2 hour film would be from 15 Gigabytes to 22ish Gigabytes.
Well, one gigabyte is equal to 1,024 megabytes, so this particular movie would leave you with 19 gigabytes and 322 megabytes.
Way less than 1. In a 2 hour movie there are only 4 gigs.
A gigabyte (GB) is equal to 1,073,741,824 bytes. Therefore, a 759 gigabyte hard drive contains approximately 815,728,640,256 bytes (calculated as 759 x 1,073,741,824).
The standard 'unit' for computer memory size is 1024; 1024 bits in a byte, 1024 megabytes in a gigabyte, and 1024 gigabytes in a terabyte.
The size of a movie usually varies between 1 and 3 GB depending on the length of the movie and the quality of the picture. This would mean that 16 GB could hold between 5 and 16 movies.
Maybe 25. Depends on the length and resolution of the movie.