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Dennis Burger

Review: Apollo 10 1/2: A Space Age Childhood

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Apollo 10 1/2: A Space Age Adventure

review | Apollo 10 1/2: A Space Age Childhood

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Richard Linklater uses animation to tell this semi-autobiographical tale of growing up in Houston during the Apollo program

by Dennis Burger
April 7, 2022

There was a moment, maybe six minutes into Richard Linklater’s Apollo 10½: A Space Age Childhood, where I felt I’d been had. The film seemed to part ways not only with the premise sold to me in the trailer but also from the conceits built into the opening scenes. But I was wrong about that; I hadn’t been deceived. Instead, I’d been pulled into something far more compelling than anything hinted at by the film’s marketing—something that, quite frankly, I’m glad I didn’t have to figure out how to market. 

To understand what I’m on about here, it might be helpful if you pause for a second and watch the trailer for Apollo 10½ (which we’ve embedded below for your convenience). But if you’re in more of a reading than a watching mood, here’s the gist: It’s the late ’60s, and NASA has a problem on its hands that can only be solved by a brainy fourth-grader. The first lunar lander has been built too small and they need this kid to do a trial run of the moon landing before the actual event. 

It’s a cute premise for a fantasy film and exactly the sort of story I would trust Linklater to get right. But Apollo 10½ is not that film. That plot thread takes up nearly no more time in the actual narrative than it does in the trailer. Instead, the bulk of the story is a semi-autobiographical reminiscence about Linklater’s childhood in Houston during the Apollo era, with the young character Stan (and his adult self, voiced by Jack Black) serving as Linklater’s self-insert. It’s not exactly a love letter to a specific time and place, but more of a time capsule.

And it was that realization that made my heart sink a bit, because nostalgic romps of this sort have not only been done to death—in everything from the original Wonder Years to Netflix’ short-lived Everything Sucks!—but also often function as nothing more than cheap dopamine fixes on the one hand or circus sideshows on the other. But with Apollo 10½, Linklater manages to do nostalgia right by never leaning too hard on lazy revisionism or rose-colored glasses. It seems to me that what he’s trying to say is, “This is, to the best of my memory, what it felt like to live in the world I grew up in. These are the experiences that shaped me. But keep in mind that memory is fallible and storytellers always have a penchant for spit and polish.” 

Perhaps my favorite thing about the film is that, with a runtime of just 98 minutes, it feels deliberately and perfectly paced. And this is despite the fact that it occasionally lapses into seemingly meaningless digressions, such as the two minutes spent exploring meal planning and the ways in which Stan’s mom would recycle Saturday’s baked ham into the rest of the week’s leftovers. 

It takes a bit to realize that such episodes aren’t digressions, though, but the entire point of the film. Because more than anything else, Apollo 10½ is about the weird little details of our youth that stick with us into middle age and beyond. It’s also about what it feels like to live through a moment in history and how our recollections are colored as much by cultural perspective as by actual events. 

Apollo 10½ is the third film Linklater has shot live-action and then animated over, following A Scanner Darkly and Waking Life. Creatively speaking, the use of rotoscoping here is at least as legitimate as it was in those films, and in some ways more so. Much of this one involves people watching screens—either cinema screens or the communal family-room TV—and different animation techniques are employed to make subtle distinctions between fantasy and history within the context of this fantastically historical film. 

It also serves as a subconscious reminder that engaging with a moving image isn’t the same as engaging with reality, even if what’s being shown on the screen is ostensibly non-fiction. But then there’s also this really neat unspoken rumination on the allure of speculative fiction and popular culture and how it can all feel more meaningful in the moment than a straightforward account of actual fact. 

Whether the animation works for you or not as a narrative device, there’s no denying that Netflix’ Dolby Vision presentation is flawless, even when the animation itself isn’t. There isn’t an expansive color palette to capture here, but shadow detail is always fantastic (and occasionally crucial to the experience of the story), and the imagery is clean, tight, crisp, and well-detailed throughout. I didn’t spot a single artifact in the presentation that could be attributed to its streaming bitrates.

It’s a shame I don’t have such glowing praise for the Dolby Atmos soundtrack. It’s honestly the one aspect of Apollo 10½ about which I’m not absolutely gaga. Music and sound effects are so aggressively mixed and fire-hosed over every surface of the room that it’s frankly distracting. Jack Black’s narration also gets deprioritized in the mix far too often at the expense of aural whizz-bangery that just doesn’t fit the film’s aesthetic, mood, or intent. And the 5.1 mix isn’t much less abusive. 

On my second watch-through (I couldn’t resist going back for seconds), I decided to downmix the 5.1 to stereo, and the entire film worked much better. But don’t let my curmudgeonly attitudes toward Atmos scare you off. It’s a minor annoyance that frankly wouldn’t have bothered me nearly as much if the rest of the experience hadn’t been so wonderfully gratifying. If we make it to the end of 2022 without Apollo 10½ standing high on my list of the year’s best films, I’ll be shocked. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | Netflix’ Dolby Vision presentation is flawless, even when the animation itself isn’t. Shadow detail is always fantastic and the imagery is clean, tight, crisp, and well-detailed throughout.

SOUND | The music and sound effects are so aggressively mixed and fire-hosed over every surface of the room that the Atmos track is ultimately distracting

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Review: Jojo Rabbit

Jojo Rabbit (2019)

review | Jojo Rabbit

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Seemingly about a Hitler-obsessed German youth, Taika Waititi’s absurdist comedy turns out to be aimed more at the cultural absurdities of the present 

by Dennis Burger
February 7, 2020

In any other year, Jojo Rabbit would be fighting for the top spot among my favorite recent films. This absurdist lark from Taika Waititi (Flight of the Conchords, What We Do in the Shadows, Hunt for the Wilderpeople) is exactly what you would expect upon learning that the crazy bastard who actually made a great Thor movie against all odds then turned his weird attention toward the Holocaust and the Hitler Youth. 

On the surface, Jojo Rabbit is the tale of a young lad so infatuated with der Führer that he conjures Hitler out of thin air, Calvin & Hobbes-style, not only as a best imaginary friend but also as a fellow agent of unwitting chaos and something of a conscience. Things take a turn for the weirder when little Jojo discovers a Jewish girl hiding within the walls of his home and is forced to choose between the safety of his family and his commitment to an ideology he doesn’t understand in the slightest.

And if that’s as far as you decide to dig, there are loads of laughs to be had, assuming you’re not horribly offended by the premise. So many, in fact, that by the time the closing credits rolled, my cheeks legitimately hurt and I swear I felt abs forming under my tubby middle-aged tummy.  

But just as Waititi used the laugh-a-minute Thor: Ragnarok as a vehicle for some very real ruminations about colonialism and the lasting impacts thereof, he uses Jojo Rabbit to not only take the piss out of fascism, but also to explore its appeal. Seriously, what causes a precocious little boy to Sieg Heil! and buy into all manner of horrible conspiracies about the Jewish people? Furthermore, why is it that bumbling idiots seem to hold such sway over massive swaths of the general population? Waititi seems to be saying that if we can’t understand that, we’re ill-equipped to combat it.  

Unlike so many other filmmakers who have recently grappled with notions about why inherently good people do bad things, Waititi actually has answers. Pretty simple ones, when you get right down to it, but answers nonetheless. 

His primary conclusion: “We’re asking the wrong questions.” Right from the opening scene, Waititi uses a German dub of the Beatles’ “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” cut together with screaming crowds of Nazis that are almost indistinguishable from fawning crowds of Beatlemaniacs to slyly point to the fact that cults of personality—any personality—are at least part of the problem. 

Along the way from that cheeky beginning to the inglorious end of World War II, Waititi takes shots at groupthink, cognitive dissonance, nationalism, and identity politics in equal measure, but when you get right down to it, what he seems to be saying is that the root of all our problems is a lack of genuine human connection. And he uses the anachronistic disconnect between his setting and his choice of soundtrack music, language, and mannerisms to point out that, for all our pontification about social media and modern life, this isn’t a new phenomenon. 

None of this should come as a surprise if you’re already familiar with Waititi’s work. What does come as a surprise is how often he plays it safe with this one. I guess he figured he had to tug on the reins from time to time to keep from offending literally everyone, and maybe he has a point. I wouldn’t know, since I’m not offended by much of anything. But sometimes the tonal shifts toward the conventional seem a little forced and insincere. Thankfully, the expected turn toward the sentimental at the end of the film is pulled off with such heartfelt authenticity that it’s difficult not to wooed by it all. 

My only remaining niggle—and this is entirely subjective—is that Scarlett Johansson is somewhat miscast as Jojo’s mother. And I say this as someone who thinks Johansson is actually underrated as an actor. She positively transforms her body language and her entire demeanor for the part, but something about it all doesn’t feel quite right. Especially when the rest of the casting—especially the two adolescent leads—is so spot on.

Another unexpected thing is how gorgeous the film is from beginning to end. Mihai Malaimare, Jr., in his first collaboration with Waititi as far as I can tell, proves himself to be an absolute master of color theory, bathing nearly every scene with a deft mix of rich warm hues and crisp, cool punctuation that’s delivered beautifully by Kaleidescape’s 4K HDR presentation. Jojo Rabbit was shot at 3.4K and finished in a 2K digital intermediate, so it might not satisfy the dermatologically obsessed or those who chase razor-sharp edges. But the expanded color gamut of HDR10 does wonders for the mix of subtle pastels and retina-shocking primary hues. 

Whatever concerns you may have about resolution, this is one you’ll want to watch on as large a screen as possible, by the way. Malaimare goes for some unexpected long shots at times to capture the beauty and scope of the scenery during some dialogue-heavy scenes, where other cinematographers might have opted for tight closeups instead. In a world where streaming video is squeezing commercial cinemas out of the equation more and more every year, he defiantly composes for a massive canvas, assuming (hoping?) that the images will take up as much of the viewer’s field of view as possible. 

The sound mix isn’t quite as expansive but Kaleidescape’s DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 is a faultless presentation of it. The sound design is far more interested in servicing the needs of the film than exercising your speakers, and as such it’s largely a three-channel mix, spread across the front, with surround channels only used to add ambience and a sense of space until late in the film when the action gets a little Looney Tunes. But that’s exactly the approach this film needs.

As I said, in any other year, Jojo Rabbit would be hovering right near the top of my annual favorites. If there’s anything truly working against it, it’s not the instances in which Waititi plays it safe, or in which Johansson’s knack for emotional complexity works against her in a role that should be more one-note until it isn’t. No, the only thing really holding the film back is that it’s forced to share oxygen with a comedy like Parasite, which is more unapologetically unflinching and navigates its tonal shifts more effectively. 

But don’t let that keep you from watching this one. Any film that can make me guffaw as hard and as frequently as this one did without insulting my intelligence has a spot in my film library. It may not be perfect, but it’s a necessary film right now. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | The film’s deft mix of rich warm hues and crisp, cool punctuation is delivered beautifully by Kaleidescape’s 4K HDR presentation

SOUND | The sound design is far more interested in servicing the needs of the film than in exercising your speakers, and as such it’s largely a three-channel affair that’s faultlessly presented by Kaleidescape’s DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 mix

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Review: The Godfather Part II

The Godfather Part II (1974)

review | The Godfather Part II

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This release sets a new standard for how an older 35mm film should be transferred to 4K HDR—unlike the new release of the original Godfather 

by Dennis Burger
April 1, 2022

As I write this, Mike Gaughn and I have been frantically calling each other at odd hours for the better part of a week, trading notes on the 4K HDR releases of The Godfather and The Godfather Part II and trying to make sense of them both. He, unfortunately, drew the short straw on purpose and has to wrap his mind around the new restoration work done for the original film, which is an order of magnitude better than any previous home video release but suffers from some glaring (and, I would argue, at times unavoidable) issues that will be irksome to cinephiles and subliminally jarring to the uninitiated. 

Just because he has the harder task doesn’t make me the lucky one, though, because I’m saddled with the challenge of explaining why the image for Part II—which is less obviously restored, obviously less manipulated, not as sharp, more consistently grainy, and less pronounced in its contrasts—is not merely the superior transfer but one of the finest film restoration and preservation projects I’ve ever seen of a 35mm film of this vintage.

The differences between the new UHD HDR releases of these two films are plain to see from almost the first frame of each. With Part II, blacks aren’t overly crushed, grain is consistent throughout, and although the image may appear softer, a closer look reveals that it genuinely contains more meaningful detail, not to mention much more organic textures. 

Why does this matter? Let’s take the early scene in which Senator Geary meets with Michael Corleone in his office. Compare it to the opening scene of the first film and you’ll see that blacks aren’t as black, contrasts aren’t as stark, and the image doesn’t pop as much. 

On a superficial level, the second film might not quite measure up to the first by videophile standards. But look closer and you’ll see that the image has more depth, nuance, and delineation in its darkest regions. Geary’s pinstripe suit, for example—nearly as lost in the shadows as it is—still reads as fabric photographed in low-light conditions. The subtle gradations come through. 

Fast-forward to the aftermath of the assassination attempt on Michael and you’ll see a similar effect. As Corleone’s men scramble through darkness punctuated by spotlights, there are times in which characters are backlit, mostly rendered in silhouette, especially right around the 36-minute mark. Judged by the criteria we normally apply to home video transfers, the image here might seem a little gray and washed out, with blacks that aren’t fully black. 

But ignore the standards by which you think you’re supposed to judge a video transfer and just take the image on its own terms, and you’ll see that there’s real shape to these figures—that even in near-total darkness they still have form. Try to bring the darkest parts of this image down to true, 0 IRE black and these figures would be reduced to construction-paper cutouts. Meaningful shadow detail would be lost. 

I could give a million other examples (perhaps more, given the length of the film), but most would boil down to the same conclusion: Unlike the new restoration of The Godfather, the work done to Part II this time around is less obvious, manipulative, and transformative . . . but in almost every respect more revelatory. 

And some of that is a consequence of the increased resolution of UHD, which allows the fine film grain and the detail inextricably intertwined within it to shine through. But much of it also has to do with the new HDR grade, which highlights the different shooting techniques used by Gordon Willis to delineate the prequel and sequel portions of the film in a way no previous home video transfer could.

The flashbacks in particular will now be my go-to demo material for illustrating the difference between contrast and dynamic range, two fundamental aspects of image reproduction that are far too often conflated in our discussions of picture quality. Watching the movie in HDR for the first time, I couldn’t shake the notion that Willis must have shot much of the film with low-contrast filters, something that has never been quite as blatantly obvious in older home video transfers. A quick internet search confirmed this. 

But the relative lack of contrast is balanced by the fact that there’s a ton of subtlety in the value scale—subtlety that couldn’t be properly captured by older home video standards. In short, this new effort proves once and for all that HDR isn’t simply about blacker blacks and whiter whites but rather the number of steps between the darkest and lightest portions of the image.

The new HDR grade also allows for a color palette that is still pushed toward the warm end of the spectrum, especially in the flashbacks, but one that lacks the bad-spray-on-tan effect that plagued previous releases. And mind you, I don’t mean to imply that the skin tones are true to life. But they certainly seem to be truer to what Willis was trying to render.

There’s one other aspect of this new release I’m grateful for: That all this necessary scrutiny prompted me to go back and listen to the DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 mix again. It sounds like exactly the same mix that was included with the 2008 Blu-ray release, but it’s been a while since I listened to that one because the 5.1 remix of the first film is so distracting I got into the habit of watching both films in mono just for the sake of consistency.

The 5.1 remix for Part II deserves reevaluation, though. It’s very well done, and suffers from none of the odd soundstaging of diegetic music and tonal inconsistencies that make the first film so hard to digest in anything other than mono. The remix for Part II is more aggressive, more adventurous, more of a departure in many ways from the original sound experience. But it has to be admitted that it simply works. 

The one disappointment with Kaleidescape’s release of Part II is that Paramount has, for whatever reason, withheld the bonus features accompanying the UHD Blu-ray boxset, some of them created for this release. As such, I decided to also snag the films on iTunes, just to enjoy the bonuses.

Given what a proponent of streaming I am, I also couldn’t resist the urge to compare the image quality of the Apple and Kaleidescape releases, with the expectation of no significant differences. Boy howdy was I wrong. Even when viewing the iTunes release on Roku Ultra (a superior streamer to the Apple TV in almost every sense) via the Apple TV+ app, I was struck by how inferior it was to the Kaleidescape experience in every way except for the wider color gamut and expanded value scale. In streaming, the fine grain structure is almost entirely lost. And as such, much of the textural impact of the film is lost with it. 

I’m not sure I can entirely explain this. After all, I’ve seen some seriously grainy films on Apple TV+ that stood toe-to-toe with their UHD Blu-ray or equivalent releases. My best guess is that rendering grain of this sort at streaming bitrates normally forces the encoder to lean hard on the mode-dependent coefficient scanning capabilities of HEVC to prioritize higher frequencies. But for The Godfather and The Godfather Part II especially, the image requires smaller coefficients across the board to faithfully capture both high- and low-frequency image data, and that necessitates much higher bitrates. 

All of which is a mouthful of a way to say that streaming just doesn’t cut it for this one. You need to experience The Godfather Part II at the highest bitrates possible to truly appreciate the work done on this restoration. 

Until something better comes along, which hardly seems likely any time soon, this will be my new reference standard for how older 35mm films should be restored, remastered, and encoded for UHD HDR. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | The increased resolution of UHD allows the fine film grain and the detail inextricably intertwined within it to shine through, while the HDR grade displays a ton of subtlety in the value scale, showing that HDR isn’t just about blacker blacks and whiter whites 

SOUND | The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 mix is more aggressive and adventurous than the original mono but is very well done overall

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Review: Writing with Fire

Writing with Fire (2021)

review | Writing with Fire

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Shot mostly with cellphones and inexpensive cameras, this documentary is an engrossing examination of journalism and new technology in lower-class Indian society

by Dennis Burger
March 25, 2022

Writing with Fire, the Oscar-nomianted feature-length debut by filmmakers Sushmit Ghosh and Rintu Thomas, is as prime an example as I’ve seen lately of a documentary that serves as both window and mirror. On the surface, it follows the journalists of Khabar Lahariya, a newspaper run by Dalit women—the lowest of the lowest-class citizens of India—as they transition from operating as a small weekly paper to creating a digital enterprise that functions primarily in the new-media space.

Brewing just beneath the surface, though, is a sweeping indictment of corporate news; a discussion about finding the balance between journalism as a responsibility and media as an industry; a rumination on the critical distinction between neutrality and objectivity; and perhaps most importantly, a meditation on all the topics dissected by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky in their seminal 1988 book Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media. 

How much of that is intentional I can’t know, of course. Probably very little. It seems as if Ghosh and Thomas set out to tell the story of these women in the midst of a transformational moment and deeper truths simply rose to the top. But it hardly matters. Intentional or not, they’ve created a film that contains not only resonant universal truths but also insights into a culture most Westerners can’t begin to pretend to fully comprehend. 

To give just one example: Early on, as the paper’s chief reporter, Meera Devi, discusses with her staff the importance—and dangers—of having a larger social-media presence, one of the young writers reveals that she has never even touched a smartphone. Her family only owns one between them but she has never used it out of fear of damaging it. And now she’s being told that this is an essential tool of her job. 

There’s another scene toward the middle, which will no doubt keep me awake tonight, that I wish I could put in front of everyone I know and beg them to absorb it and reflect on it. One of the three main journalists at the heart of the documentary is attending a press conference, sitting across the desk from a high-ranking police official. As she refuses to accept canned answers from him and continues to press him for the truth, a mainstream correspondent sitting behind her berates her for her dogged approach. Later, outside, he lectures her about the importance of playing nice with authority figures, of maintaining access, of offering praise before criticism. 

The film doesn’t bother spoon-feeding this to the viewer, opting instead for a show-don’t-tell approach, but this small scene serves as an especially impactful commentary on how the people for whom our institutions function at all, no matter how inefficiently, are always the first to silence those who are completely failed by those same institutions when they dare speak out. 

There are numerous other examples but they ultimately all boil down to one point: This is a study in contrasts and commonalities, of the universal juxtaposed against the deeply personal, of the unique dangers these women face placed on equal footing with the shared truths we should and would be discussing out in the open if only more of us cared. 

I wish Writing with Fire were more readily available but, best I can tell, right now it’s only available in the U.S. to rent or buy on Amazon Prime Video. A physical media release is slated for late April 2022, but only on DVD.

That old SD format is probably more than sufficient, although Prime delivers the film in HD with Dolby Digital+ 5.1 audio. There isn’t much to say about the picture, given that it was shot on, as best I can tell, a mix of cellphones and consumer-grade mirrorless cameras with a run-and-gun approach. As such, the quality of Amazon’s streaming presentation varies from shot to shot, although when conditions are right, lighting is sufficient, and the resolution is there, the picture quality is about as good as HD gets. More often than not, the source material is a bottleneck in terms of quality, though. It is what it is.

The audio, on the other hand, was a tough nut for me to crack. For about the first hour, I was distracted by some seriously weird idiosyncrasies in the mix. Ambient and environmental sounds were well placed in the surround soundfield, but voices tended to hover a few feet in front of me in the form of an amorphous and indistinct blob of ethereal audio. They even followed me as I moved from one side of my sofa to the other. Granted, I don’t understand Hindi, so intelligibility wasn’t the problem. But it was still unnerving. 

I eventually figured out that the issue was that I had my system’s Dolby Atmos up-mixing capabilities turned on, which isn’t usually a problem with films of this sort since there isn’t much to up-mix. But for whatever reason, voices are placed in both the front left and right channels here—not the center—and, worse, they’re slightly out of phase. Because of that, Dolby Surround doesn’t recognize the split vocal tracks as a common signal that should be combined and routed to the center and instead spreads them out into the surrounds and overhead speakers. When I changed my system to the Pure Direct setting—which bypasses all DSP and turns the preamp into a straight decoder, not a processor—voices took their rightful place toward the front of the room but still nowhere near the middle of the screen.

If any of the above seems critical or needlessly technical, that’s not my intention. It’s simply that I encourage you to watch and appreciate this film, and if you’re doing your watching in a home cinema environment, I want you to have the best experience possible. 

That’s not to say that Writing with Fire is perfect, even ignoring the technical shortcomings. At 96 minutes, it positively whizzes by, and there are several story threads I wish we could have sat with for another 15 or 20 minutes here and there. But I’d far rather spend time with a film that leaves me wanting more than one that overstays its welcome, even when the subject matter is as important as this. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | Because of the quality of the source material, Amazon’s streaming presentation varies from shot to shot, but when conditions are right, lighting is sufficient, and the resolution is there, the quality is about as good as HD gets

SOUND | Ambient and environmental sounds are well placed in the surround soundfield of the 5.1 mix, but voices can be indistinct and badly positioned if any kind of upmixing is employed

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Review: Drive My Car

Drive My Car (2021)

review | Drive My Car

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This Oscar-nominated Japanese film is aloof, detached, chilly, and pretentious—and more than worth it in the end

by Dennis Burger
March 23, 2022

I’ve rarely felt as conflicted as I do right now, standing in front of my keyboard, trying to collect my thoughts about Ryusuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car. The film is, at three hours long, an exercise in not only delayed gratification but also delayed insight. It moves at the pace of a pitch drop experiment, and by the time its opening credits rolled at somewhere around the 40-minute mark, after a long and borderline impenetrable prologue, I found myself tempted to walk away from it and not look back. Indeed, I might have done so had I not been tasked with reviewing it. 

The story doesn’t really start to congeal until somewhere near the 90-minute mark, at which point it stingily begins to dole out keys to locks it’s been forcing the viewer to fiddle and fumble with in frustration to that point. By the third act, its various thematic threads start to come together to form an incredibly impactful and moving meditation on pain, grief, language, art, solipsism, forgiveness, and self-reflection. And there’s some part of me that wants to return to the beginning with insights gleaned from the ending. But I’m not sure I will, if only because Drive My Car asks—nay, demands—that you give it as much or more than it gives you in return. 

The film follows a man’s attempts to stage a multi-lingual stage production of Chekhov’s Uncle Vanya two years after the sudden and unexpected death of his wife, while also being forced to submit to having a driver at the insistence of the theater. And while I appreciate the simplicity of its story, I think the bulk of my hesitance comes from the fact that for most of its runtime, it comes across as aloof, detached, chilly, and more than a little pretentious. Looking back on the work as a whole, that’s sort of a necessary conceit to make the journey work, but there’s simply no denying that from moment to moment, it can feel laborious. 

And the look of the film does little to help you connect with its characters, environments, or quiet drama. Captured digitally in ArriRaw at 3.4K resolution and finished in a 2K digital intermediate, the imagery seems to have been processed to a degree after leaving the camera, although it’s not the typical film-look processing you might expect. Instead, it appears as if contrasts have been turned down and black levels elevated, which results in a flatness and apparent loss of saturation, all of which combines to give the picture a foggy quality. 

As of this writing, Drive My Car is only available to view in the U.S. on HBO Max, which delivers a nearly perfect presentation in HD. Given the tonal flatness of the image and the overall lack of chromaticity—really, lead character Yūsuke Kafuku’s beloved red Saab and the occasional glare of brake lights contribute more color to the film than anything else—it’s hard to imagine the picture benefiting much for an HDR grade, and there are only two minor blink-and-you’ll-miss-them instances of aliasing in the background of the image that hint at the need for higher-than-HD resolution. But only briefly. Whether they’re a consequence of the down-sampled DI or HBO Max’s encoding of the master files, I have no way of knowing. But they’re so fleeting that it feels like nitpicking to bring them up.

The film makes its way to the streaming service with its original soundtrack intact—primarily Japanese with a heaping helping of Mandarin, Korean, and English thrown in—in Dolby Digital+ 5.1. Although the surround channels are rarely employed for anything other than music, it’s a nice front-heavy mix that does a wonderful job of capturing the ambience of its environments, as well as the occasional meteorological punctuation and the droning of wheels on asphalt. Dialogue clarity is top-notch and Eiko Ishibashi’s hauntingly beautiful score is delivered with excellent fidelity. If you hadn’t guessed already, it’s not exactly home cinema demo material but you could have just as easily gathered that from the trailer. 

That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t watch Drive My Car. But nor can I heartily recommend that you do watch it. That would be like me telling you to go train for a marathon, assuming you’re physically capable. Would you find it rewarding in the end? Perhaps. Would you hate my guts for a solid 16 to 20 weeks in the leadup to the final event? Probably. 

At least with Drive My Car, your loathing would last a few hours at most, although it might feel like much more than that. Ultimately, though, I think my biggest source of ambivalence is that I desperately long for more films of this sort to be made. I very much want it to succeed, because I borderline need more writers and directors to make slow, contemplative, introspective films, especially ones that pay such rewarding dividends in the end. I just wish this one were an hour shorter, a little less repetitive, a lot less austere, and had more faith in its audience to connect with its themes without belaboring them half to death. Looking back on the experience of the film as a whole, I have to say I appreciate the hell out of it. But I just can’t bring myself to love it.

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | HBO Max delivers a nearly perfect HD presentation with only two minor blink-and-you’ll-miss-them instances of aliasing in the background of the image

SOUND | The front-heavy Dolby Digital+ 5.1 mix does a wonderful job of capturing the ambience of the environments, exhibits top-notch dialogue clarity, and delivers the hauntingly beautiful score with excellent fidelity

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Review: Parallel Mothers

Parallel Mothers (2021)

review | Parallel Mothers

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Almodóvar’s latest is melodrama as art, done with the flair of New Wave-era Godard

by Dennis Burger
March 22, 2022

I was recently chatting with a dear friend about a particularly awful movie I’d just finished watching. In the course of the conversation, I likened it in ways to a Rubik’s Cube that had been “solved” by someone who simply pulled off the stickers and reaffixed them, with no real understanding of the fundamentals of a standard 3×3 cube layout (e.g., red is always opposite orange, blue opposite green, etc., and the center squares of each side never move relative to one another). I won’t call that movie out, since it hardly matters. I only bring it up because Pedro Almodóvar’s Parallel Mothers also reminds me in many ways of a distinctive solution to a Rubik’s Cube.

Rather than a ham-fisted, amateur attempt at lazy deception, this film brought to mind watching my favorite blindfolded cubers, who are forced to solve the puzzle in their heads before temporarily losing use of their eyes, and who rely on complicated mnemonic memory aids that I just barely understand. If they make a mistake somewhere in the middle of the solution, they usually don’t know until it’s too late. And if they do flub a turn and somehow catch themselves and course-correct, it’s almost more impressive than a perfect solve. 

And in case it wasn’t obvious, I’m talking about Rubik’s Cubes because I don’t want to talk about Parallel Mothers on its own terms. There’s simply too much for one review to contain and far too many surprises I could spoil. But here’s the gist: The film follows two parallel storylines, both centered on Penélope Cruz’s character Janis. One follows her ongoing efforts to have a Spanish Civil War-era mass grave in her hometown excavated so her forebears and others can receive proper burials. The other involves two unplanned pregnancies and a hospital oversight that results in her newborn being swapped with another. And in weaving these stories together, Almodóvar manages to say something truly meaningful and resonant about generational differences, intergenerational trauma, and the idiosyncratic familial bonds that form between humans, related and unrelated alike.

That’s enough info to give you a sense that Parallel Mothers is ultimately melodrama. But it’s melodrama elevated to the level of art due to skillful and at times subtle scripting, meaningful character development, brilliant performances all the way around, and some cinematic techniques that occasionally reminded me of Godard’s best New Wave-period films. It’s a shame it’s not amongst this year’s Best Picture nominees since it belongs in the conversation alongside Dune and CODA as one of 2021’s better cinematic efforts. 

As of this writing, Parallel Mothers is only available in the U.S. as a PVOD rental from most major digital retailers, and I point that out because I suspect the quality of its presentation might be affected by that. Even on Kaleidescape, the film is only available in SDR, although the resolution is UHD. 

The former isn’t as impactful as you might suspect. Despite being shot digitally and recorded in Sony’s X-OCN (extended tonal range Original Camera Negative) format at 16 bits, and despite being an incredibly vibrant film with wonderful color design throughout, the image doesn’t seem to be constrained by its 8-bit presentation. I spotted a brief instance of what looked like white-clipping in one shot, but other than that, the delicious color palette and tonal scale seem to fit comfortably within the constricted gamut of SDR. 

The cinematography is exceptional and detail is at times just lovely. But—and this is a big but—there are some issues with the presentation whose causes I can’t quite figure out. The image is pretty noisy, and I’m not sure if that noise was captured in the camera or involves some sort of film-look process including faux grain. What’s more, even on Kaleidescape, there are misplaced textures and glitches of the sort you might associate with extremely low streaming bitrates—far lower than those employed by better services like Disney+ and Apple TV+. But that hardly makes sense, given that this is a full-bandwidth download. So I strongly suspect the problems come from the files provided by Sony. 

Mind you, these problems only really rear their heads at large cinematic proportions. Sitting 6.5 feet from my 75-inch display (~45.5 degrees field of view), I found the noise and the odd movement of textures distracting. When I moved back to around 7.5 feet, though (~40 degrees field of view, comparable to a 120-inch projection screen viewed from a distance of 12 feet), the image was consistently lovely, and the impact of the weird noise and apparent encoding issues all but disappeared. So if you’re viewing this in your home cinema and your preferred seat is in the first row, maybe move back to the second row. 

Kaleidescape presents the film with its original Spanish mix, encoded in DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1, with forced English subtitles in yellow. For the most part, it’s an understandably front-focused mix, aside from the score music, which often dances out into the room. But the shape of the sound mix changes near the end, thanks to some artfully employed surround effects that pull you into the screen, seemingly placing you between the camera and its subjects. It’s a neat effect, and its judicious application makes it all the more effective. 

Hopefully by the time Sony Pictures prepares the film for a proper North American home video release, the issues with the noise and funky textures will have been resolved, because this one is a keeper for me. It’s probably Almodóvar’s best film since 2006’s Volver, and it’s a damn sight better than most of this year’s Best Picture noms. Just know going in that if you rent the film during its PVOD window, you might find the somewhat flawed presentation of its lovely cinematography a little distracting—or maybe this is just what the film looks like. I honestly can’t know for sure.

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | The delicious color palette and tonal scale seem to fit comfortably within the constricted gamut of the rental’s UHD SDR presentation, but there are some issues with glitches, noise, and misplaced textures that seem to stem from Sony’s transfer files

SOUND | The 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio mix is understandably front-focused, aside from the score music, which often dances out into the room

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Review: Joker

Joker (2019)

review | Joker

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More character study than comic-book epic and definitely not an exercise in escapism, this genre evocation of ’70s NYC is very much anchored in Joaquin Phoenix’s performance

by Dennis Burger
December 18, 2019

I had to watch Todd Phillips’ Joker twice to write this review. And it required two viewings because I realized, as the credits rolled the first time, I had absolutely nothing meaningful to say about the video transfer or the sound mix. From beginning to end, I was so hypnotized (and horrified) by Joaquin Phoenix’ performance as the titular character that I honestly forgot I was supposed to be reviewing a home video release. 

Had I gone ahead and put fingers to keyboard after that first viewing based on my hazy impressions, I would have told you a story about a grungy, filmic 4K HDR transfer that evoked the gritty neo-noir classics of the 1970s and ’80s. It took a second pass to realize that Joker’s cinematography is actually pristine, which makes sense given that it was captured digitally in a mix of 3.4K, 4.5K, and 5.1K resolutions, and finished in a 4K digital intermediate. It’s the set dressing, the lighting, the framing, and indeed the movement of the camera that evokes the look of the cinematic era the film aspires to. When you get right down to it, though, Joker is an objectively gorgeous film with a wonderfully revealing home video presentation.

The sound mix, too, would have gotten an inaccurate assessment had I not gone back for a double-dip. Hildur Guðnadóttir’s brilliant, minimalist cello score would have certainly been the focus of my discussion, as it dominates the mix, or at least one’s memory of it. But other than that, nothing really stuck to my ribs in terms of the overall delivery of audio, aside from a few distant ringing phones, ignored in the background, which struck me as being rendered with a wonderful illusion of space.

It wasn’t until the second time through that I even realized the soundtrack for the Kaleidescape release of the film is Atmos, but you shouldn’t take that oversight as an indication that the mix is subtle. Focusing more on the technical presentation than the performance at the heart of the film, it’s an ambitious and at times aggressive mix, one that uses its height channels to enhance the vertical elements of the filth-ridden cityscape of Gotham. (Not the stylized Gotham of the Burton or Nolan films, but a blatant homage to the New York City of ’70s cinema.) The fact that I barely noticed the height channels the first time is as much a credit to the artistry of the mix as it is to Phoenix’ mesmerizing performance. As with the imagery, the sound simply works in service of the narrative and never serves to distract from it. 

If it seems as if the only aspect of the film itself I can focus on is the acting of its lead, there’s a reason for that. Joker isn’t story-driven. It’s as pure a character study as I’ve seen in ages. For those of us who love comic books and the movies based on them, it’s easy to go into a film like this—ostensibly an origin story about a character who has never had a consistent canonical backstory—with a ton of baggage. The thing is, though, Joker isn’t interested in your baggage. It isn’t interested in the 79-year history of the character as Batman’s archnemesis. Hell, it isn’t interested in Batman at all. Indeed, the overall mythology of Gotham City and its most famous residents is so tangential that it could have been left out of the film altogether and it wouldn’t have had any major effect on the plot, what little of it there is. 

Director/co-writer Phillips seems so completely uninterested in any of the normal trappings of comic-book films that to call this a comic-book film at all feels dishonest. To discuss it in relation to the four-color serialized stories on which it is (very) loosely based would be to miss the point entirely. To understand the film, we have to view it for what it is: An exploration of the internal and external forces—personal and societal—that combine to create not merely a villain or a criminal but an unabashed agent of chaos, one that is, in this film, more man than myth.

In exploring all of this, Phillips touches upon a lot of conflict familiar to modern audiences—wealth inequality and the rage of the working class aimed at the apathetic ruling class, the failures of bureaucracy, media bias, our weird attitudes toward mental illness, our complex and often contradictory attitudes toward nonconformity. 

As I mentioned, there isn’t a lot by way of plot here and it’s often difficult to figure out what Phillips wants us to take away from the film on any of these topics. Indeed, in the supplemental material included with the Kaleidescape download (and due to be included on the UHD Blu-ray release in January), he claims that the film isn’t really about any of these things. I’m not sure I buy that. I think it was easier to hide behind that dismissal than it was to admit that he doesn’t really have the answers—he simply wants us as an audience to do some of the heavy lifting and accept the unique part we play in creating such monsters, individually and collectively.

But it’s entirely possible you’ll come away from the film with completely different impressions than I did about whatever underlying message there may be. I, for example, couldn’t help but read into the narrative some serious thematic exploration about agency and free will, both topics I think about quite a bit. But in a few brief discussions with others who’ve seen the film, I seem to be alone in that, at least within my friend circle.

A lot of that has to do with how abstract Joker is at times. I referred to it as pure character study, and I stick by that. There are plenty of wonderful actors sharing the screen with Phoenix, namely Zazie Beetz, as well as Robert De Niro, whose character is largely a nod to The King of Comedy, a film that very much inspired elements of this one. But Arthur Fleck, aka “Joker,” is the film’s only real character. 

As well as pure character study, Joker is also pure cinema—a work of art that simply couldn’t have existed in any other form than as a motion picture. Imagery and audio sit in the passenger seat alongside character development and story just sort of seems to be dragged along for the chaotic ride, hanging onto the rear bumper for dear life (and I assure you, I don’t mean that as a slight in any way).

That focus on fundamental human truths combined with the undeniable ’70s and ’80s aesthetic keep Joker from feeling too zeitgeisty, despite the current subject matter it grapples with. There is one thing, though, that betrays the film as absolutely not a product of the era it emulates. Many parallels have been drawn between Joker and Taxi Driver, and they’re not unfair. One crucial difference, though, is that this film’s titular character could not, in any light, be viewed as a hero or anti-hero or anything other than a force of nature unleashed by circumstance and his own weaknesses. To write it off as a mere mashup of Taxi Driver and The King of Comedy, would be intellectual laziness of the highest (and snottiest) order. 

Phillips walks a very thin line: He wants you to understand this character without sympathizing with him. He doesn’t want you to want to watch the world burn—he simply wants you to recognize and acknowledge why some people do. And as with the best interpretations of this character (or at least the character that goes by this name) in print and on screen, Phillips wants you to admit that, as wrong as he may be and as dangerous as he may be, there’s an alluring element of truth behind the Joker’s lies, and refusing to admit as much is why we struggle to honestly understand the seemingly senseless acts of violence that have become so commonplace they barely register in the 24-hour news cycle unless the body count is truly catastrophic. To tiptoe right up to that line without crossing over into the territory of glorification is perhaps this film’s neatest trick.

In the end, though, I can imagine some viewers taking uncomfortable issue with this approach, with the lack of moralizing, the lack of overt condemnation for this murderous clown. Speaking for myself alone, I don’t think the film needs it. I think it’s implicit. I can’t imagine anyone cheering at the end of this cinematic tone poem. Then again, I didn’t see Joker in commercial cinemas, and I’m glad I didn’t. Because anything other than slack-jawed silence as its credits rolled would have confirmed my worst suspicions about humanity.  

Viewed at home, via my own AV system, with no rustling snack packaging, whispering, cellphones glaring from the peripheral, or obtrusive snickering at the two or three overt references to comics history the film makes when it serves its purposes—in other words, taken on its own terms, and viewed without distraction—I can honestly say that this is one of the best films of 2019. 

I can also say, without hesitation, that it’s one I’ll return to again and again, to meditate on its themes, its red herrings, and most importantly one of the most captivating, heartbreaking, frustrating, and fascinating character portrayals I’ve witnessed in ages. But it almost seems vulgar to discuss how beautifully shot it is, and how wonderful this home video presentation preserves its sumptuous cinematography.  

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | Joker’s cinematography is pristine, resulting in an objectively gorgeous film with a wonderfully revealing home video presentation

SOUND | This is an ambitious and at times aggressive Atmos mix that uses its height channels to enhance the vertical elements of the filth-ridden cityscape of Gotham

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Review: Parasite

Parasite (2020)

review | Parasite

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Kaleidescape offers a sumptuous 4K HDR presentation of this 2020 Best Picture recipient 

by Dennis Burger
January 15, 2020

Three thoughts occurred to me pretty much simultaneously as I sat and reflected upon Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite as the closing credits scrolled by. Thought the first: How on earth am I going to say anything meaningful about this film without spoiling the entire experience? I’ve never been one for rehashing plots, so it’s easy enough to shy away from giving away story beats or plot twists. What a film means and how well it’s made are generally far more interesting to me than the what-had-happened-was of it all. 

With Parasite, though, the themes are so nuanced and ever-evolving that to go down that road would be to rob you of half the experience of watching the film. Just as you think you’ve figured out what Parasite is really about, it becomes about something subtly different, in a way that seems shocking at first but utterly inevitable in retrospect. 

Thought the second: What a fascinating counterpart to Todd Phillips’ Joker this film is. It isn’t, I think, a spoiler to say that on the surface Parasite is about wealth inequality and class struggles, territory Joker explored as well. But while Phillips uses this thematic kick-starter primarily as fuel for one of the most enthralling character studies of the past few years, Bong uses it as the bedrock of a tightly scripted narrative that doesn’t merely encourage rapt attention—it downright demands it. 

While Joker lives or dies by Joaquin Phoenix’ improvisation, and indeed feels like it could have been cut together a hundred different ways resulting in a hundred different films, Parasite by contrast comes across as a meticulous orchestration that hinges upon every piece of punctuation in the screenplay. Shorten one lingering glance or snip one line of dialogue, and I can’t help but feel as if it would be akin to playing Rush’s “YYZ” in 4/4 time. 

Of course, comparisons between the two films can only go so far, as one is a drama based on a comic book and the other is a wholly original black comedy that morphs into farce before shifting gears into thriller territory before evolving into . . . well, something else altogether. And yet, I can’t help but see the two films as opposite sides of the same coin—perhaps due to the proximity of their release? Maybe. But it feels like there’s a deeper connection going on here, something both zeitgeisty and timeless. 

In addition to surface thematic similarities, the films do share one other thing in common: Stunning cinematography and absolutely unimpeachable home video presentations. Kaleidescape’s UHD HDR release of Parasite wonderfully presents the 4K digital intermediate of the film, which was shot on Arri Alexa 65 cameras and captured at 6.5K resolution. The transfer doesn’t lean too heavily on intense highlights but has a high-contrast look that makes most use of its expanded dynamic range at the lower end of the value scale. Colors are simply sumptuous, but more than anything else, it’s cinematographer Hong Gyeong-pyo’s eye for framing and composition that makes Parasite such a visual feast.

Kaleidescape presents the film with your choice of 5.1 or stereo sound, both in Korean despite being labeled as English. There are no caption options, as subtitles are baked into the transfer and positioned within the 2.39:1 frame. 

There will be some controversy, I’m sure, over the fact that Universal decided to release the film without its original Atmos soundtrack here in the U.S. This is true of both its digital release now as well as its disc release (Blu-ray only, no UHD) later in the month. Interestingly, other local distributors (The Jokers Films in France, for example) are delivering Parasite with its object-based audio intact, and I’ll admit even I’m intrigued to hear what that sounds like, because the surround mix is as bold and cheeky as the film itself. Aggressive pans from the surround soundstage into the front channels are employed frequently, though not gratuitously, to redirect the viewer’s attention and extend the fabricated reality of the film out into the room.

If I had to speculate about why we’re not getting Atmos in the U.S. (and let’s be clear here, this is nothing more than speculation), I would guess that the 5.1 option we’ve received is a new nearfield mix intended for the relatively more intimate confines of home theaters or media rooms. Whatever the reality, it’s hard to complain about such a brilliantly crafted audio experience, and it does up-mix quite nicely into Atmos, if that’s your preference. 

Thought the third: If Parasite wins a condescending Best International Feature Film Oscar and gets snubbed for Best Picture, I’m going to pitch a hissy. (And I say this as someone who normally puts as much stock in the Academy Awards as I do the serving-size suggestions on a box of Cheez-Its.) This isn’t the sort of token foreign film Hollywood trots out every year and then dislocates its collective shoulders in an effort to pat its own back for patronizingly celebrating a film with subtitles. It’s a universally applicable work of art whose themes resonate across cultural boundaries. 

It’s also one of those rare films that manages to be both poignant and approachable. It asks tough questions without offering pandering answers and it somehow manages to not be even slightly opaque in the process. Quite frankly, if it doesn’t win Best Picture, I can only assume it’s because the Academy jealously recognizes that few modern American directors would have had the courage to make this film, at least not in quite this way.

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | Kaleidescape’s UHD HDR release wonderfully presents the 4K digital intermediate of the film, with a transfer that doesn’t lean too heavily on intense highlights but has a high-contrast look that makes most use of its expanded dynamic range at the lower end of the value scale

SOUND | The 5.1 surround mix is as bold and cheeky as the film itself. Aggressive pans from the surround soundstage into the front channels are used to redirect the viewer’s attention and extend the fabricated reality of the film out into the room.

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Review: Our Planet

Our Planet (2019)

review | Our Planet

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This Richard Attenborough nature documentary for Netflix stretches the boundaries of 4K HDR on streaming

by Dennis Burger
April 9, 2019

It’s been barely more than a year since beloved natural historian Sir David Attenborough took viewers on another romp around the natural world in Blue Planet II, so for some it may seem a little soon for another such epic journey. After all, Attenborough’s tentpole nature documentary series tend to follow big technological leaps, either in terms of presentation (HD, 4K, HDR, etc.) or exploration (e.g. the Nadir and Deep Rover submersibles employed in Blue Planet II). 

Needless to say, we haven’t made such quantum leaps in the past calendar year. For the most part, what sets the new Netflix original Our Planet apart from its predecessors isn’t technological (although its heavy reliance on 4K drones does mean that we get to witness the wonders of the natural world from a new perspective at times). No, for the most part, what sets this series apart is its intent and the prominence of its message.

Since the 1980s, Attenborough’s documentaries—at least the big “event” series—have been largely subtle in their environmental and conservational messaging. A summary sentence here or there; maybe a wrap-up episode that connected the dots and spelled out how human activity has threatened and continues to threaten the fragile ecosystems around our pale blue dot. 

With Our Planet (and its accompanying hour-long making-of special), that message takes center stage—which isn’t to say that Attenborough dwells on it constantly. Large swaths of the eight-episode series are devoted to the drama, heartbreak, and hilarity of the natural world. Show a ten-minute clip from the middle of any given episode to your dad and he might be hard-pressed to tell it from an old episode of Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom if not for the stunningly modern cinematography and deliciously dynamic Dolby Atmos sound mix. 

But Attenborough does a great job of priming the pump here, setting the stage in such a way that you can’t help but meditate on how much of nature relies on delicate, precarious balances, and how those balances are undeniably being thrown out of whack. One example: It’s one thing to be told that arctic sea ice is on the wane. It’s another altogether to see with your own eyes how that’s affecting the wildlife in the region. At the other end of the globe, we also see how diminishing sea ice around Antarctica is disrupting eating, mating, and migration patterns of everything from seals to penguins to humpback whales. 

Even if that message doesn’t resonate with you, it’s impossible to deny that Our Planet is an absolute feast for the eyes. Presented in 4K with both Dolby Vision and HDR10 (depending on which HDR format your system supports), the series is one of the most striking video demos I’ve ever laid eyes on—in any format. The high dynamic range is used to enhance everything from the iridescent shimmer of orchid bees to the fluorescent glow of algae growing underneath sea ice, and while we’ll likely never know how much better (if at all) it could look if released on full-bandwidth UHD Blu-ray or via Kaleidescape, one thing is for certain: This streaming series manages to surpass the already mind-blowing video presentation of Blue Planet II on any format, streaming or not, and that’s mostly due to its stunning HDR mastering and grading. 

There are times when the contrasts and highlights are so rich and nuanced and the imagery so detailed that your brain just can’t help but interpret the picture as glasses-free 3D. Individual snowflakes fall through the back of the frame, reflecting stray sparkles of sunlight without a hint of lost definition or clarity. If not for the liberal application of slow-motion, you’d swear you were looking out a window. Only the appearance of some very occasional, subtle, fleeting, almost imperceptible banding in the underwater sequences of the second episode give the slightest clue that this isn’t uncompressed video.

The audio is mostly fantastic, as well. For a nature documentary, the surround effects can be startlingly aggressive but they’re never egregious and are always used for the purposes of immersion, not merely spectacle. If I have a slight beef, it’s that the Dolby Digital+ encoding doesn’t quite fully capture the nuanced timbres of Sir Attenborough’s inimitable voice in the way I suspect Dolby TrueHD would. 

As mentioned above, the series is also among the rare Netflix offerings to be accompanied by bonus features—in this case, a behind-the-scenes documentary that sheds light on how so many of the stunning images within were captured. The series was four years in the making and involved 3,365 filming days at 200 locations, with a total of 6,000 drone flights and 991 days at sea. With only an hour to play with, the behind-the-scenes doc can’t dig into all of the high-tech trials and tribulations of the filming but it’s enough to scratch your curious itch and answer most of the biggest “How did they film that?!” questions you might have.

In the end, it’s difficult for me, a nearly fanatical David Attenborough devotee, to come to terms with the fact that Our Planet could conceivably be the last of his major earth-spanning natural history mini-series. He is, after all, approaching the age of 93. As such, and when taking into consideration the urgency with which he delivers his message here, it’s hard not to view this series as a potential swan song. If that be the case, I couldn’t imagine a finer farewell, nor a more fitting final lesson from the man who has done so much to entertain, inform, and enlighten us about the wonders of the natural world for the better part of half a century. To call this one “essential viewing” may be the biggest understatement I’ve ever typed. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | This streaming series surpasses the already mind-blowing video presentation of Blue Planet II on any format, streaming or not, thanks mostly to its stunning HDR mastering and grading.

SOUND | For a nature documentary, the surround effects can be startlingly aggressive, but they’re never egregious and instead are used for the purposes of immersion, not merely spectacle

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Review: Pan’s Labyrinth

Pan's Labyrinth (2006)

review | Pan’s Labyrinth

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Both brutal and enchanting, Guillermo del Toro’s low-budget tale of the costs of escaping into fantasy is well served by UHD HDR

by Dennis Burger
October 18, 2019

Pan’s Labyrinth (El laberinto del fauno) for whatever reason—is a fantasy film for people who have no patience for fantasy. It’s a war film for people who don’t like war films. It’s a fairy tale for people who prefer the Brothers Grimm to Disney. It’s allegory that avoids so many of the lazy conventions that made J.R.R. Tolkien such a vehement detractor of allegory. It’s a rich and nuanced, deeply symbolic and personal work that I believe will go down in history as Guillermo del Toro’s best, topping even El espinazo del diablo (aka The Devil’s Backbone), with which it shares a lot of thematic and narrative similarities. 

If it weren’t obvious from the above gushing, I’m an unabashed devotee of this haunting little film. But I’ve never really been overly thrilled with any of its home video releases. The original Blu-ray from 2007 was excessively smoothed and de-noised, robbing the imagery of much of its grit and impact. It also suffered from lackluster black levels, which is a sin for a film that lives so unapologetically in the shadows. 

The Criterion Collection release from 2016 was a vast improvement, thanks in part to the contributions of del Toro himself, who supervised a new color grade and DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 remix. But that release dropped at a time when I was already spoiled by HDR so I couldn’t help but be distracted by the lack thereof and the richer shadow detail a UHD release would bring with it.

Fast forward to 2019, and we finally have that UHD/HDR release—not from Criterion, but rather Warner Bros. Unsurprisingly, this isn’t sourced from the same regraded transfer as the 2016 Blu-ray, which one has to assume is owned by Criterion. And that’s a bit of a shame because the superior color timing of that transfer plus the improvements brought by HDR would make for a near-perfect representation of this film. 

Make no mistake: The UHD/HDR is a big improvement over the original Blu-ray, despite being sourced from the same 2K digital intermediate. Black levels are vastly deeper, shadow detail is much improved, depth of field and edge definition are a substantial step up, and the frustrating, plasticky smoothness of the original HD release is thankfully a thing of a past. The grain of the original 35mm negative, though not pronounced or distracting, gives this new transfer an earthiness that greatly benefits it. It’s even an improvement over the Criterion release in terms of contrasts and dynamic range. I just wish a few of the key color-grading changes del Toro made for Criterion could have been incorporated here.

I’m picking nits, of course, if only because I adore this beautiful work so deeply. I do need to get a little pedantic about what I mean by “beautiful,” though. While an utter treat for the eyes from a cinephile’s perspective, Pan’s Labyrinth is not videophile demo material. This is, after all, a low-budget Mexican film, shot for less than $20 million. There is some softness to the image, some rough edges and textures here and there, and some compromises that result from the original digital intermediate that could only be rectified by a full-scale restoration sourced from the film negatives. That would mean re-rendering the computer-generated effects, which—to be frank—don’t entirely hold up to scrutiny, especially in this more revealing UHD transfer. 

Thankfully, though, most of the effects work is practical, with heavy reliance on makeup, costuming, and animatronics. (Del Toro fans will immediately recognize longtime collaborator Doug Jones beneath tons of latex as both the Faun and the Pale Man—two of the film’s creepiest fantastical creatures—if only due to his inimitable pantomime and distinctive lithe physique.)

This Warner Bros. release oddly does carry over the new DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack from the Criterion release, which I suppose could be considered a downgrade from the 7.1-channel track of the original Blu-ray in terms of channel count but is undeniably a subtle upgrade in every other respect. Honestly, you won’t miss the extra channels. But if you comprehend any Spanish, you’ll appreciate the enhanced dialogue intelligibility, as well as the improved clarity and spatial refinement of the mix. And, hey, if don’t hable español, the English subtitles were actually written by del Toro himself, due in large part to his frustration with the awful translated subtitles for El espinazo del diablo. 

All of the above is a roundabout way of saying  if you love Pan’s Labyrinth and want to view it at its best, this new UHD/HDR release is that, just by a hair. It’s worth the upgrade even if you own the Criterion Blu-ray release, if only because its remaining flaws are less distracting. 

But if you’re averse to dark parables and are simply looking for demo material to stress every pixel of your 4K display, you can probably safely pass. This isn’t a mindless feel-good film. It’s a challenging and at times troubling look at the stark realities of war (actually, technically, the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War, as the film is set in Francoist Spain in 1944) and the dual-edged sword of escapism from such horrors. It’s also, though, a wondrous and magical fable that defiantly spits in the face of the notion that fantasy films cannot be serious art. 

By the way, for those of you who pick up the new UHD release on Kaleidescape, know that you’ll need to download the Blu-ray version included with your purchase if you want to access the bonus features. And you do. Granted, a few key goodies from the Criterion release are missing (I’ll certainly be hanging onto that physical release for the exclusive interview with del Toro and novelist Cornelia Funke), but what’s presented here still counts as a wealth of supplemental material that genuinely adds value and insight into not only the filmmaking process, but also the deep symbolism of the film. Granted, two of those supplements—the short documentary “The Power of Myth” and the audio commentary by del Toro—do rob you of the opportunity to interpret some of the story’s more ambiguous aspects for yourself, so make sure you’ve seen the movie a few times to solidify your own interpretations. 

The truly great thing about El laberinto del fauno, though, is that it rewards multiple re-watches, even after you think you’ve got it all figured out (in terms of meaning, that is— narratively speaking, it’s an incredibly simple tale that requires no parsing). I hesitate to recommend buying the film sight-unseen, if only for the fact that some viewers (my wife included) find the ruthlessness of the film’s human antagonists too much to bear. Try as I might, she can’t bring herself to give it a second chance. And that’s fair. But I would argue that none of the brutality on display is gratuitous. It’s thematically, narratively, and emotionally necessary. It’s also, thankfully, infrequent.

For my money, Pan’s Labyrinth is as near to perfection as any work of cinema made in the past quarter century. And while I can’t say the same for any of its home video releases, this new UHD/HDR release gets closer to the mark than past efforts. Quite frankly, that’s enough to recommend it as a worthy upgrade for those who are already under the film’s spell. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | This UHD/HDR release is a big improvement over the original Blu-ray. Black levels are vastly deeper, shadow detail is much improved, depth of field and edge definition are a substantial step up, and the plasticky smoothness of the original HD release is thankfully a thing of a past.

SOUND | The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack is a downgrade from the 7.1-channel track of the original Blu-ray in terms of channel count but is undeniably a subtle upgrade in every other respect

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