LAMA claims their mission is "accessibility." Copyright holders call it "industrial theft." Film purists call it "vandalism." But for a non-English speaker in a region-locked country, One.More.Time.2023.DUBBED.WEBRip.x264-LAMA might be the only way to see the film at all.
Why x264? In 2025, x265 (HEVC) rules for file size. But LAMA chose the older Advanced Video Coding standard. The resulting file is bloated: a 3.8GB 90-minute film. A x265 version would be half that.
In the endless river of digital ones and zeros, a strange artifact surfaced last week on private trackers: One.More.Time.2023.DUBBED.WEBRip.x264-LAMA . At first glance, it looks like just another scene release—a Swedish indie drama dubbed into English, ripped from a streaming service, compressed by a group named LAMA. But look closer. The file is a paradox. It is a movie about the impossibility of reclaiming the past, distributed in a format that is itself a nostalgic echo of the early 2010s.
Critics called it “ Groundhog Day for the chemically exhausted.” The film eschews dialogue for long, static shots of neon reflecting on rain-slicked asphalt. It’s slow. It’s melancholic. It’s a film that demands you sit in the discomfort of repetition.
LAMA claims their mission is "accessibility." Copyright holders call it "industrial theft." Film purists call it "vandalism." But for a non-English speaker in a region-locked country, One.More.Time.2023.DUBBED.WEBRip.x264-LAMA might be the only way to see the film at all.
Why x264? In 2025, x265 (HEVC) rules for file size. But LAMA chose the older Advanced Video Coding standard. The resulting file is bloated: a 3.8GB 90-minute film. A x265 version would be half that. One.More.Time.2023.DUBBED.WEBRip.x264-LAMA
In the endless river of digital ones and zeros, a strange artifact surfaced last week on private trackers: One.More.Time.2023.DUBBED.WEBRip.x264-LAMA . At first glance, it looks like just another scene release—a Swedish indie drama dubbed into English, ripped from a streaming service, compressed by a group named LAMA. But look closer. The file is a paradox. It is a movie about the impossibility of reclaiming the past, distributed in a format that is itself a nostalgic echo of the early 2010s. LAMA claims their mission is "accessibility
Critics called it “ Groundhog Day for the chemically exhausted.” The film eschews dialogue for long, static shots of neon reflecting on rain-slicked asphalt. It’s slow. It’s melancholic. It’s a film that demands you sit in the discomfort of repetition. But LAMA chose the older Advanced Video Coding standard