The Raid Redemption Indonesia Audio | Track Download Better

Downloading the audio is half the battle. You now need to combine it with your video file. This is called muxing (not converting). Muxing takes 30 seconds and does not re-encode the video, so there is zero quality loss.

Downloading copyrighted audio tracks without owning the original disc or digital license is piracy. The “better” approach: buy the Blu-ray (often under $10 used), rip it yourself, and enjoy the reference-quality Indonesian DTS-HD MA track. If you already own a digital copy that lacks Indonesian 5.1, some jurisdictions allow format-shifting.

You have the Indonesian audio. You need English subtitles (unless you speak Bahasa). Do not use "closed captions" (SDH) that describe sounds. Use forced subtitles or a clean translation. the raid redemption indonesia audio track download better

Best source: OpenSubtitles.org. Search for "The.Raid.Redemption.2011.720p.BluRay.x264" and download the .srt file. Name it exactly the same as your video file (e.g., The.Raid.Redemption.mkv and The.Raid.Redemption.srt). VLC or Plex will auto-load them.

While the English dubbing for The Raid is higher quality than most, it is still a dub. The original actors (Iko Uwais, Joe Taslim, Yayan Ruhian) delivered their lines with emotional weight and physical exertion that matches their martial arts movements. Hearing their original voices grounds the movie in reality. You aren't just watching a fight scene; you are witnessing the characters' struggle in their native tongue. Downloading the audio is half the battle

Because we cannot host or link to copyrighted files, here are the legal and technical guidelines to get the superior audio track:

Some fan groups have synced the Indonesian DTS-HD MA 5.1 from the Blu-ray to 4K HDR versions of the film (since the official 4K release in some territories only included English 5.1). Search for: Note: Always verify the audio is not a transcode (e

The.Raid.Redemption.2011.4K.HDR.REPACK.Indonesian.DTS-HD.MA.5.1-Remux

Note: Always verify the audio is not a transcode (e.g., a fake “DTS” from an AAC source). Use MediaInfo – the bitrate should be > 2,000 kbps for DTS-HD MA.

Downloading the audio is half the battle. You now need to combine it with your video file. This is called muxing (not converting). Muxing takes 30 seconds and does not re-encode the video, so there is zero quality loss.

Downloading copyrighted audio tracks without owning the original disc or digital license is piracy. The “better” approach: buy the Blu-ray (often under $10 used), rip it yourself, and enjoy the reference-quality Indonesian DTS-HD MA track. If you already own a digital copy that lacks Indonesian 5.1, some jurisdictions allow format-shifting.

You have the Indonesian audio. You need English subtitles (unless you speak Bahasa). Do not use "closed captions" (SDH) that describe sounds. Use forced subtitles or a clean translation.

Best source: OpenSubtitles.org. Search for "The.Raid.Redemption.2011.720p.BluRay.x264" and download the .srt file. Name it exactly the same as your video file (e.g., The.Raid.Redemption.mkv and The.Raid.Redemption.srt). VLC or Plex will auto-load them.

While the English dubbing for The Raid is higher quality than most, it is still a dub. The original actors (Iko Uwais, Joe Taslim, Yayan Ruhian) delivered their lines with emotional weight and physical exertion that matches their martial arts movements. Hearing their original voices grounds the movie in reality. You aren't just watching a fight scene; you are witnessing the characters' struggle in their native tongue.

Because we cannot host or link to copyrighted files, here are the legal and technical guidelines to get the superior audio track:

Some fan groups have synced the Indonesian DTS-HD MA 5.1 from the Blu-ray to 4K HDR versions of the film (since the official 4K release in some territories only included English 5.1). Search for:

The.Raid.Redemption.2011.4K.HDR.REPACK.Indonesian.DTS-HD.MA.5.1-Remux

Note: Always verify the audio is not a transcode (e.g., a fake “DTS” from an AAC source). Use MediaInfo – the bitrate should be > 2,000 kbps for DTS-HD MA.