Cinemaz Tracker Review -
Think of it as the Gallic cousin of Karagarga (for the ultra-rare) or AvistaZ (for Asian cinema), but with a distinct focus on films that prioritize auteur vision and historical significance over box office appeal. Rating: 9/10
The site encourages of rare physical media, and there's a strong anti-transcoding rule (no re-encoding someone else's work without permission). This keeps the library high-quality and free of the "scene" clutter found on general trackers. Ratio & Economy Rating: 7/10 cinemaz tracker review
The site runs on a heavily customized version of (the same framework used by Redacted and PassthePopcorn). The interface is clean, responsive, and searchable to a fault. Advanced search allows you to filter by resolution (SD, 720p, 1080p, 4K), source (Blu-ray, WEB-DL, DVD), encoding format (x264, x265), and even audio commentary presence. Think of it as the Gallic cousin of
The only downside for international users: the primary interface language is French. While Google Translate works fine, some internal forum threads, release notes, and rules are French-only. If you're not comfortable with basic French navigation, you may feel a slight barrier. Rating: 9/10 Ratio & Economy Rating: 7/10 The site runs
Old torrents (5+ years) are often still well-seeded by dedicated archivists. Newer uploads see moderate speeds—don't expect the 100 MB/s of IPTorrents. However, for rare content, even a 500 KB/s seed is a blessing. The site has a handful of seedboxes, but most users are home-connection archivists. Rating: 6/10
Best for: Cinephiles, film students, French speakers, archival collectors. Not for: Casual viewers, ratio hoarders, mainstream blockbuster fans.