REC or Rec may refer to:

Contents

Organizations [link]

Science and technology [link]

Television, film, and fiction [link]

  • REC (film), a 2007 Spanish horror film
  • REC 2, a 2009 sequel to the Spanish horror film
  • Rec (manga), a Japanese manga series; also refers to anime based on it

Transportation [link]

Business [link]

Places [link]

  • Reç, a settlement in Albania

Other uses [link]

  • Recitation, as abbreviated on course schedules
  • Recreation Ground, an area for fun
  • Remote Emergency Care, a first-aid course tailored to the outdoors.

https://wn.com/REC

REC (film series)

REC (stylized as [REC]) is a Spanish zombie horror film series. The original 2007 film was shot in Barcelona, Spain and the title is an abbreviation of the word "record", as it appears on a video camera.

The first REC film was remade in the United States as the 2008 film Quarantine.

REC was followed by three sequels; REC 2 in 2009, REC 3: Génesis in 2012, and REC 4: Apocalypse in 2014 as the final installment in the franchise. Spanish company Filmax International is responsible for the production of the REC franchise and released all four installments.

The series lead protagonist, Ángela Vidal, is portrayed by actress Manuela Velasco in all the films except REC 3: Genesis.

Actor Javier Botet portrays Tristana Medeiros, the series main antagonist.

References

External links

  • REC at the Internet Movie Database
  • REC 2 at the Internet Movie Database
  • REC 3: Génesis at the Internet Movie Database
  • REC 4: Apocalypse at the Internet Movie Database
  • Rec. 2020

    ITU-R Recommendation BT.2020, more commonly known by the abbreviations Rec. 2020 or BT.2020, defines various aspects of UHDTV such as display resolution, frame rate, chroma subsampling, bit depth, and color space. It was posted on the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) website on August 23, 2012.


    Technical details

    Resolution

    Rec. 2020 defines two resolutions of 3840 × 2160 ("4K") and 7680 × 4320 ("8K"). These resolutions have an aspect ratio of 16:9 and use square pixels.

    Frame rate

    Rec. 2020 specifies the following frame rates: 120p, 119.88p, 100p, 60p, 59.94p, 50p, 30p, 29.97p, 25p, 24p, 23.976p. Only progressive scan frame rates are allowed.

    Digital representation

    Rec. 2020 defines a bit depth of either 10-bits per sample or 12-bits per sample.

    10-bits per sample Rec. 2020 uses video levels where the black level is defined as code 64 and the nominal peak is defined as code 940. Codes 0-3 and 1,020-1,023 are used for the timing reference. Codes 4 through 63 provide video data below the black level while codes 941 through 1,019 provide video data above the nominal peak.

    Condemnation

    Condemnation or condemned may refer to:

  • Damnation, the antithesis of salvation
  • The Condemnations of 1210–1277, a series of condemnations or restrictions on certain medieval teachings at the University of Paris
  • in property law, the process by which a public entity exercises its powers of eminent domain
  • Condemned (film), a 1929 film that earned Ronald Colman an Academy Award nomination
  • The Condemned, a 2007 American Action fiction by film
  • Condemned: Criminal Origins, a psychological horror video game and its sequel Condemned 2: Bloodshot
  • "Condemned" (Stargate Atlantis), an episode of the television series Stargate Atlantis
  • "Condemnation" (song), a 1993 song by Depeche Mode
  • Condemnation (novel), a 2003 fantasy novel by Richard Baker
  • Condemned (band), a death metal band from Belfast, Northern Ireland
  • A song from Penetrations from the Lost World (reissue), by Dimension Zero
  • A song from A Sense of Purpose by In Flames
  • A song from The Powerless Rise by As I Lay Dying
  • The act of sentencing a person to capital punishment
  • Condemnation (song)

    "Condemnation" is a song by Depeche Mode, released as the group's twenty-ninth UK single on 13 September 1993 (14 September in the US), and the third single from their album Songs of Faith and Devotion. The song reached number 9 on the UK Singles Chart.

    "Condemnation" is a gospel-esque song with a rock twist. The 7" version is the "Paris Mix", with female backing vocals added and an emerging drum beat scheme. Band members indicated that this song normally would have been sung by Martin Gore, but Dave Gahan insisted on singing it instead. Gahan voted for "Condemnation" to be the first single for Songs of Faith and Devotion, but lost.

    The B-sides are remixes of "Death's Door" and "Rush", and some live tracks from the Devotional Tour. "Death's Door" was a song from the 1991 Until the End of the World soundtrack. The original version is still exclusive to that CD, recorded only by Martin Gore and Alan Wilder after the World Violation Tour was over.

    The music video for "Condemnation" was directed by Anton Corbijn and was shot in Hungary. For unknown reasons, it did not appear on The Videos 86-98 in 1998, replaced by the live version from Devotional. The original video eventually resurfaced on The Videos 86-98's 2002 re-release (The Videos 86-98+). Both videos appear on the Devotional DVD re-release in 2004 (although the "Condemnation Live" video was edited so that it wasn't identical to the one in the main Devotional movie).

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