There's one small grievance to report. With the player set to output 1080/24p (displayed on a 24fps-capable Toshiba 52Z3030 with 5:5 pulldown), the picture suffers from an occasional stutter but it's not a major problem.

The deck's DVD upscaling is solid, with Superman Returns looking suitably detailed and artefact-free. The spectacular scene in which Superman brings a plane down to land in a baseball stadium is vibrant and contains a decent amount of detail.
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Not only are we impressed by the deck's ability to decode three of the four HD formats, but also by its general sound quality. We hooked up the BD-P1400 to the 5.1-channel inputs of our receiver and let it rip with Déjà Vu's 5.1-channel PCM soundtrack, and the results were spectacular. The constant barrage of explosions, car crashes and gun shots are delivered with real kick, while bread-and-butter audio elements like dialogue and music are also delivered with pleasing clarity. CD playback is also warm and inviting, though in operational terms it's very slow to select a track due to the long pause after pressing the button.

Verdict

The BD-P1400 is a marked improvement on the BD-P1000 in terms of design, performance and features and is superior to the feature-light Sony BDP-S300. But the Samsung's Profile 1.0 specification will make it outdated very quickly, and for this reason we reckon it might be a better idea to hold out for a Profile 1.1 deck, the first of which are being launched later this year. But if you absolutely have to buy a Blu-ray deck now, and you're not bothered about BonusView, then you could do a lot worse than the BD-P1400, particularly when you consider its very reasonable price tag.