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Dennis Burger

Review: The Wizard of Oz

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The Wizard of Oz (1939)

review | The Wizard of Oz

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The 4K HDR restoration shows there’s more subtlety to the film’s Technicolor palette than we’d expect based the previous home releases

by Dennis Burger
October 31, 2019

As much as we tend to discuss Ultra HD video and high dynamic range in relation to the latest Hollywood and Netflix have to offer, it’s sometimes easy to forget something important: The films that stand to benefit most from current home-video standards aren’t the newest digital spectacles but classic works created entirely in the analog domain. Older films possess a level of detail and nuance no previous home-video format has been capable of replicating and short of cinema revivals, most of us have never seen them in all their splendor. 

I don’t know of any film as old as 1939’s The Wizard of Oz to make the leap into 4K HDR before now. For that matter, I don’t know of any other movies filmed in three-strip Technicolor that have been remastered for 4K HDR to date. That alone makes this new home-video release academically interesting, even if the Judy Garland classic holds no emotional sway over you. 

Not that it matters, of course, but it does for me. Hold emotional sway, that is. I’ve owned Oz on every home-video format available in the U.S., including every VHS release, every Laserdisc release, every DVD and Blu-ray. But my love affair goes further back than that. One of my earliest memories is of lying belly-flat on the rug in our den, watching Dorothy and friends traipse down the Gray Brick Road on our old black & white tube TV. Much to my dad’s chagrin, that was the start of a yearly tradition for me—one I uphold to this day every Thanksgiving. 

I can almost define each era of my life in relation to how I experienced that annual ritual. My first time viewing it on a color TV was, it should go without saying, a significant revelation. And although there have been upgrades since (the 1989 restoration of the sepia tones in the opening and closing acts, the 2005 restoration and re-alignment of the original Technicolor film strips), rarely has any viewing of Oz blown my mind quite to the same degree as seeing it in color for the first time.

Until now. This 4K HDR release of The Wizard of Oz is the first to actually replicate the experience of viewing the movie by way of a pristine 35mm print. And this is evident as early as those early sepia-toned shots in Kansas, which you wouldn’t think would make for a great HDR demo. It’s important to remember that, for all the talk about peak brightness and nits and whatnot, the most significant boost to dynamic range HDR delivers is in the lower end of the value scale. There are simply more steps of near-black to work with here, and that’s put to good use in the opening scenes by dragging detail out of the shadows without brightening the overall image. 

It should come as no surprise, though, that this new transfer doesn’t really come to life until Dorothy steps through the monochromatic door of her wind-tossed home into the rainbow lands of Oz. But again, the benefits here may not be what you’re expecting. 

If you go in anticipating tons of intense specular highlights, you’re going to be left wanting. Some vibrant peak brightness is used to bring out the sparkle of Glinda’s jewels and of course the gleaming glimmer of Dorothy’s ruby slippers. But in all cases, this higher-intensity brightness is organic and tastefully done—so much so that it may only affect you subliminally. 

There’s simply no mistaking the color palette of this new transfer for that of any previous home  release. Early offerings of Oz did what they could with their limited color gamut. Around the time of the aforementioned remaster in the mid-2000s, though, Warner saw fit to actually boost the color saturation of the movie in order to approximate the Crayola hues Technicolor was capable of delivering. 

The problem with that was that the entire palette of Oz was dragged along for the ride. So, although the Wicked Witch’s verdant skin tones may have looked close enough, subtler colors like the pastels of the Lullaby League were overly boosted and overly intense—just plain wrong, when you get right down to it. 

When viewed via Kaleidescape, the 10-bit palette of this new release (which was taken from an 8K, 16-bit scan of the original film elements) puts all of the colors in their proper proportions. So, for example, in certain scenes in Munchkinland, subdued pastels share the screen with luscious primary hues—something most of us have never seen outside of the film’s more recent theatrical revivals. 

The detail and definition of this transfer will henceforth be my response to those who say we don’t need 4K resolution at home. Subtle details that were obscured by previous 1080p and lower-resolution releases are restored for all the world to see—even down to the individual hairs on Dorothy’s head. 

There is, of course, a hefty helping of softness to the image in places, especially in closeups of Billie Burke (Glinda). My point is, it’s taken until now to bring all of the detail—softened, filtered, gauzed though it may be in some scenes—to home displays. I’m struggling to see where even an 8K release could improve on what I’m seeing here in terms of detail and definition, much less color and contrast.

If I have a nit to pick, it’s that this new color grade still gets the early and late sepia-toned film a little wrong. It’s important to remember that this footage was shot in black & white and hand-tinted sepia—and then hand-tinted sepia again in the ’80s. And as with every release of the past couple decades, this version takes that tinting just a touch too far, with slightly too much warmth. But that’s only a concern if you get overly fussy about “filmmaker’s intent.” (Incidentally, if you’re curious about how I can speak to “filmmaker’s intent” in this case, given that there were so many chefs stirring this pot, we can look to a scene later in the movie in which Dorothy peers into the Wicked Witch’s crystal ball and sees her Aunt Em in Kansas, in all her sepia-tinted glory. That’s what Kansas is supposed to look like.) 

And . . . [checks notes] Yep. That’s it. That’s literally the only pedantic niggle I can come up with. Some viewers may take issue with the fact that those sepia scenes don’t quite hold up to the clarity and definition of the film’s colorful middle. That’s largely due to the original negatives for the first and last act having been lost in a fire in the 1970s, so they have since been sourced from an optical intermediate struck in the ’60s. The only original negatives we have at this point are for the color parts of the film, so this is the best Kansas is ever going to look. 

The purist in me also wants to half-heartedly complain about the lack of the the original mono soundtrack with this new release, but I just can’t bring myself to grump about that, given how great the DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 remix sounds. And this is a new remix, by the way—not the lossless 5.1 mix that was included with the 70th and 75th anniversary Blu-rays. 

The surround channels are employed a little more frequently this time, and there’s an appreciable boost to dialogue intelligibility and vocal clarity, along with some enhanced bass, especially during the tornado sequence. But all in all, this surround mix is true to the sprit and overall aesthetic of the film. It’s certainly not as egregious or aggressive as some recent remixes for classic films. So even if the original mono were present, I can’t imagine I would ever listen to it.

As for the Kaleidescape presentation, my only beef is that, in addition to the 4K HDR version, you’ll also need to download the Blu-ray-quality version if you want access to all of the bonus goodies—including the audio commentary with historian and author John Fricke, which carries over from every home release since 2005. There’s also the excellent The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: The Making of a Movie Classic from 1990, hosted by Angela Lansbury, which for some reason was dropped from the 75th anniversary video releases but makes a welcome reappearance here. 

Oodles of other bonuses are worth your time if you’re a dedicated fan, but these two are essential viewing/listening for everyone, so download both versions of the film from the giddy-up. Why you can’t simply download the bonus features without double-dipping on the film itself is beyond me.

What else is there to be said? If you’re reading this, you already know what the film means to you—you’re simply deciding whether it’s worth the 4K HDR upgrade for an 80-year-old film. The answer to that is a resounding, enthusiastic, unapologetic “Yes!” Few films have benefited from the increased resolution, enhanced dynamic range, and most importantly the wider color gamut of our current home video standards nearly so much as this one. My biggest regret is that I can’t put 4K HDR screen grabs in front of you and let you see the improvements with your own eyes. Unfortunately, the limitations of the web make that impossible.  

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 | Few films have benefited from the increased resolution, enhanced dynamic range, and wider color gamut of our current home video standards.

SOUND | The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 remix is true to the sprit and overall aesthetic of the film, never becoming as egregious or aggressive as some remixes for classic films.

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Review: Beetlejuice

Beetlejuice

review | Beetlejuice

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This isn’t just a subtle improvement over previous home video incarnations but a massive leap that breathes new life into this tale of the dead

by Dennis Burger
September 8, 2020

Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice probably doesn’t spring immediately to mind as a prime candidate for a 4K HDR remaster. That’s not to say anything about the quality of the film itself, of course. In fact, I would rank it as the second-best “goth” film of all time (right after Hal Ashby’s Harold and Maude, of course). It’s just never been a film that made for decent home theater demo material. The DVD release looked like a skit performed for public-access TV, and the Blu-ray—while a huge improvement—was still a blown-out, garish, overly saturated mess of a thing that could be categorized as “watchable” at best. 

That kind of thing sticks with you. For the past 32 years, the home video presentation of Beetlejuice has left a lasting impression in the mind of viewers of how this quirky and adorably dark film is supposed to look. My only hope here is that enough people give the UHD HDR release enough attention to undo some of the damage done by previous efforts.

You don’t really notice the advantages of the new HDR color grade at first, and I suspect that’s because the opening credits sequence—with its sweeping overhead view of the village of Winter River, CT, which morphs into a model thereof—seems to have been taken from a print, not the original film negative. So while you immediately get a sense of the enhanced resolution of this new restoration, the color palette is still a little limited and the overall quality of the image is ever-so-slightly dupe-y. As soon as the last title fades away, though, we quite obviously move to a scan of the original negative, and from here on out the image takes on all the qualities of beautifully restored (or perhaps lovingly preserved) 35mm film. 

Perhaps the most startling thing is how nuanced the colors are. Gone are the ridiculously ruddy skin tones and the Hulk-Smash green of the foliage (both outdoors and in the scale model of Winter River that dominates the plot of the film). Yes, as the lovely Geena Davis and a surprisingly sufferable Alec Baldwin make their trek into the idyllic little town toward the beginning, the image is still peppered with vibrant primary hues—the sign on the hardware store, the covered bridge where Davis and Baldwin’s characters lose their lives—but because of HDR10’s wider color gamut, the saturation of the overall image doesn’t have to be cranked to 11 to allow for such vivid chromaticity when and where it’s appropriate.

The second thing you notice is that there’s just so much detail in the image that has been lost in previous home video transfers, and not wholly as a function of resolution. Take the short scene in which the pushy real estate agent played by Annie McEnroe surprises Baldwin’s character at the window in a desperate push to talk him out of his home. Even on Blu-ray, the scenery behind her is a white-hot blur devoid of depth or detail, which makes sense given the 8-bit limitations of HD video. The choice had to be made whether to overexpose the world outside that window or underexpose the interior and risk losing Baldwin in the shadows. In this new 10-bit transfer, both interior and exterior are perfectly exposed. Baldwin exists in the shadows, yes, but doesn’t get lost in them, while the depth and detail of the foliage behind McEnroe still shines through. 

That’s one scene out of dozens I could point to in extolling the virtues of this UHD HDR restoration and its ability to breathe life into this tale of the dead. Other details that come to mind are the imperfections of Winona Ryder’s teenaged complexion and the fine filigree lace of Davis’s bridal gown, both of which are resolved beautifully. The film grain is also perfectly organic throughout—not too noisy, not too overbearing, but never artificially smoothed over.

But perhaps my favorite thing about this new transfer is the way it handles the scenes in the bureaucratic Neitherworld, which have always been the worst-looking aspect of the home video releases. Here, the HDR gets to flex its muscles with no concern for lifelike skin tones or believable greenery. Simply put, these sequences now glow and iridize like a fluorescent blacklight poster, which is how they’ve always looked in my memory of seeing the film far too many times to count on the big screen in the spring of ’88. 

As for the sound, I think it’s safe to say Beetlejuice didn’t sound as good on the mixing stage as it does here. Aside from a few cute and subtle exceptions, the new Dolby Atmos remix doesn’t get too carried away with repositioning sound elements or making the film sound like a modern blockbuster. And thank goodness it doesn’t included any re-recorded sound effects, as does the travesty of a remix included with the 4K HDR remaster of Hitchcock’s Psycho. The mix mostly serves to simply give more space to Danny Elfman’s delicious score and the wonderfully uplifting Harry Belafonte soundtrack. But it’s also apparent that there’s also been some equalization done to the audio, which has an enhanced richness and fidelity I don’t recall ever hearing before. And dialogue clarity is among the best of any home video release. Like, ever.

There’s nothing much by way of extras, aside from three episodes of the Beetlejuice Saturday-morning cartoon that ran from 1989 to 1991. These haven’t been restored and are horribly compressed, so they likely aren’t worth your time. The Kaleidescape download, unlike the recent UHD Blu-ray release, also includes an isolated music track—that is, a version of the film devoid of dialogue or sound effects. But it’s unfortunately married to the pan & scan standard-definition transfer of the film, so its value is debatable at best. 

But don’t let the lack of supplemental goodies bum you out. Beetlejuice is one of the worthiest UHD HDR remasters I’ve seen to date (almost on par with The Wizard of Oz), and the film itself is such a joyous (and ironic) celebration of life that it stands on its own.

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 | Maybe the most startling thing is how nuanced the colors are, followed closely by the realization there’s just so much detail in the image that has been lost in previous home video transfers.

SOUND | It’s safe to say Beetlejuice didn’t sound as good on the mixing stage as it does here, and the Atmos remix doesn’t get carried away with repositioning sound elements or making the film sound like a modern blockbuster.

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Review: Batman Returns

Batman Returns (1992)

review | Batman Returns

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The 4K HDR reissue really drives home how much better this sequel is than Tim Burton’s first stab at the Caped Crusader

by Dennis Burger
June 18, 2019

I’ve never been a big fan of shibboleths—those words or catch-phrases designed to set members of an in-group apart from outsiders. Especially in today’s geek culture, the use of such exclusionary memes seems divisive to me. But I’ll admit, I do have my own shorthand way of identifying my people: I simply work into casual conversation the observation that 1992’s Batman Returns is a better and more interesting film than the 1989 original. 

What I love most about this revelation is the looks I get in response. At one end of the spectrum you have the folks who gape at me as if I’ve just licked their nostrils. At the other end there’s a spark of realization, a look in the eye that says, “You get it!” 

What generally follows (with the latter folk, at least) is a lengthy discussion about why—why Batman Returns is everything Batman should have been, why it’s stood the test of time in a way the original hasn’t. Without hours to dig into all of it here, though, I’ll have to merely scratch the surface.

Simply put, whereas Batman—much as I love that film—is primarily a product, its weird and wonderful sequel is a genuine work of art, an aesthetic, thematic, and tonal expression that actually has something to say and stands up to legitimate re-interpretation as the years pass and the weirdness of our own world finally catches up in so many ways to the macabre and gothic political tale Tim Burton wove in this most anticipated of sequels. And surprisingly, very little of that has to do with the fact that Max Shreck—Returns’ primary villain and tertiary antagonist, played by Christopher Walken in all his scenery-chewing glory—is a nasty, narcissistic, big-city tycoon with underhanded political ambitions and a feint of concern for the common man.

In any other comic-book film, Walken really would have stolen the show. But the real standouts here are Danny DeVito as a deliciously disgusting re-interpretation of The Penguin and Michelle Pfeiffer, who simply makes Selina Kyle, aka Catwoman, her own. 

If I had to guess, I’d say one of the reasons why Batman Returns was written off as an inferior sequel in its day is the heavy emphasis on its villains—delightful as they are—to the exclusion of the titular hero, who almost shrinks into the background as a mysterious boogeyman. Or perhaps it’s simply that this film is so dramatically different from the one it follows, almost having more in common with Burton’s criminally underappreciated Edward Scissorhands, which he made in between his two Batman efforts. 

None of this is to say Batman Returns is perfect. Some of its dialogue falls flat, even if only by contrast with the sheer brilliance of other one-liners. And Keaton at times seems bored to be wearing the cape and cowl for a second time. But if, for whatever reason, you haven’t seen Batman Returns since its debut, you owe it another look, and there’s no better way to do so than the new UHD/HDR release on Kaleidescape. 

To say the film has never looked as striking as it does here would be a banal understatement. The improvements over previous home video releases simply can’t be summed up in a handful of paragraphs. The additional detail over the Blu-ray release from 2010 is jaw-dropping from beginning to end, but it’s the HDR grade that truly brings this film to life. 

Unlike Batman, which is a way more visually vibrant film than most people remember it being, Returns is genuinely stygian throughout, and the enhanced contrasts, shadow detail, and depth afforded by HDR give the streets of Gotham and the sewers beneath a depth and richness I don’t remember seeing even in the film’s original big-screen release. The new transfer also makes wonderful use of highlights, mostly to bring vivid clarity to the film’s diverse textures—especially in contrasting the dull, matte darkness of Batman’s costume against the gleaming, slick blackness of Catwoman’s getup. 

The enhanced dynamic range also elevates certain narrative elements, such as the scene in which Penguin crawls out of the sewers for the first time and is blinded by the strobing of camera flashes. Those bright flashes aren’t quite eye-reactive but they are stark enough to illuminate Penguin’s discomfort and give the viewer some small taste of his experience. 

I’ll admit, I was concerned going in that the HDR would do no favors to the numerous matte-painted cityscapes. But since the film is in many ways shot like a play whose audience is dragged from stage to stage at a frantic pace, the fact that you can now more easily see the seams in spots actually adds to the film’s charms in an appropriately weird way. Aside from a handful of optically composited effects, Batman Returns looks like it could have been shot yesterday—by a madman, to be sure (and certainly not funded by any major motion-picture studio outside of perhaps Netflix) but yesterday nonetheless.

As for the sound, unlike the UHD/HDR release of Batman, the new Dolby Atmos mix doesn’t introduce any re-recorded sound effects, largely because it doesn’t need to. The sound elements still hold up as shockingly modern and incredibly robust, and the Atmos mix simply draws atmospheric elements and bits of Danny Elfman’s iconic score into the height dimension. 

I have to say, if this is the direction Hollywood is heading with Atmos mixes, either new or re-mixed, I might have to rethink my curmudgeonly stance on the format. The new mix never whaps you over the head with kitschy audio grandstanding but is instead used largely to build the film’s environments, to give a distinct sonic signature to interiors like the Batcave and the Penguin’s underground lair. In other words, it draws you into and reinforces the onscreen action rather than distracting from it.

One other thing worth noting about the new Kaleidescape release of the film is that it’s the only digital release of the UHD/HDR remaster to include bonus features, aside from the iTunes download. Vudu, Amazon, and others have released movie-only versions that sell the film short, in my opinion. On Kaleidescape, you’ll also need to download the Blu-ray-quality version of the film to get the bonus goodies, and said bonus goodies are only available in standard-definition, since they were originally created for DVD but it’s worth the extra effort. The supplements are a continuation of those created for Batman and give a nice inside look at the making of the film, especially its effects, set designs, etc. 

I wish Burton’s commentary had also been attached to the UHD/HDR version since it’s a worthwhile listen, and having seen the film in all its 4K glory, it’s hard now to watch it in mere high-definition. But if nothing else, doing so gives one a greater appreciation of just how incredible the new restoration is. 

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 film has never looked as striking as it does here. The improvements over previous home video releases is jaw-dropping from beginning to end, but it’s the HDR grade that truly brings it to life. 

SOUND | The Atmos mix never whaps you over the head with kitschy audio grandstanding but is instead used to build the film’s environments, drawing you into and reinforcing the onscreen action rather than distracting from it..

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Review: Dune (2021)

Dune (2021)

review | Dune (2021)

This latest adaptation of the Frank Herbert classic easily eclipses all of the earlier attempts

by Dennis Burger
October 22, 2021

Let’s set aside for a moment the question of whether Denis Villeneuve’s Dune works as a partial adaptation of Frank Herbert’s classic science-fiction novel. With something in the neighborhood of 20 million copies sold, the book is one of the best-selling of its genre. But divide those sales figures by the world population and chances are very good most people who view the film will have never cracked the cover of this gargantuan doorstop of a tome. So a much more relevant question is whether or not Dune works as cinema on its own terms. 

And thankfully that ends up being the much easier question to answer. Yes—a thousand times, yes. As if he hadn’t proven it already with films like Arrival, Prisoners, and Blade Runner 2049, Villeneuve demonstrates with Dune that he understands cinema as an art form in a way few other modern directors do. 

As with most of his work, Villeneuve straddles two worlds with Dune, keeping one foot firmly planted in the traditions of the past and one foot precariously placed in an uncharted future. By that I mean that despite looking very much like a 21st-century film, it doesn’t feel like one. There’s something quite old-fashioned about it, or perhaps “timeless” is the word I’m looking for. The allusions to Lawrence of Arabia are blatant—and fitting, given how much that film influenced Frank Herbert in the writing of Dune. But Villeneuve manages to draw inspiration without aping. He evokes the spirit, scope, and energy of David Lean’s classic without being beholden to its style. The style is entirely Villeneuve’s. 

Well, cinematographer Greig Fraser (Zero Dark Thirty, The Mandalorian) also deserves a lot of credit for the style. While I said that Dune looks like a 21st-century film, that’s not quite accurate. It simply looks like a film that couldn’t have been captured before the modern era of filmmaking. Ultimately, it looks unlike anything I’ve ever seen. And that may have something to do with the unusual postproduction process. The movie was shot on a mix of IMAX film and ArriRaw digital (the latter at 4.5K resolution), but before the footage was finished in a 4K DI, all of the digital imagery was printed to film stock then scanned back to into the computer. 

That gives the imagery a unique character, to say the least. It doesn’t look entirely analog but neither does it look wholly digital. It’s the best of both methods—which, again, reinforces the notion of Dune as the perfect marriage of tried-and-true past and untested, experimental future. 

That captivating aesthetic, combined with the sheer scale of the film and its reliance on capturing as much as possible in camera (to the point that, in promotional interviews, actor Timothée Chalamet claims to recall only seeing a green screen twice during production) adds up to a film that demands to be seen at scale, on the best screen you can reasonably access. In my case, that meant watching HBO Max’s stream in my own home cinema system since the nearest commercial cinema that can legitimately claim to deliver a better audiovisual experience is a three-hour drive away in Alpharetta, GA. 

Thankfully, shockingly, the HBO Max presentation is the very definition of reference-quality. I started my stream the minute the film was available, which struck me as a foolhardy choice the instant I hit Play, given how many millions of other people must have been sitting with their fingers on their remotes, waiting for it to be unlocked. But I never experienced any glitches due to server overload and I never spotted anything in the image that could be construed as an artifact of the high-efficiency encoding of the film.

Far from it. I would go so far as to say I’ve never experienced imagery this captivating, engaging, or dynamic in my media room. Part of that is due to the sumptuous detail, the gorgeous textures, the unparalleled set design, costumes, etc. But a lot of it has to be chalked up to the fact that Dune represents the most effective application of high dynamic range grading I’ve seen to date. 

HBO Max’s Dolby Vision presentation pushed my display to extremes I didn’t know it was capable of, extremes I can’t imagine being bested by anything other than perhaps a perfectly calibrated IMAX Laser setup—and I have my doubts about even that. Simply put, if displays had rights, Dune would be a violation of the Geneva Conventions. 

But none of its visual extremes—scenes bathed in near-infinite shadows followed quickly by such dazzling brightness that your pupils will constrict to pinpoints—feels gratuitous. All are absolutely in service of the story and the environments in which it unfolds. 

Equally compelling is the Dolby Atmos soundtrack, which is likewise so dynamic that I pity the unfortunate souls who attempt to experience it through a soundbar or basic home theater speaker setup. If you’re an Atmos junkie who keeps a mental running tally of how frequently your surround and overhead speakers—and subwoofers—are pushed to their limits, you’re going to be in absolute aural heaven here. 

As I’ve stated many times within the pages of Cineluxe, I’m not one of those people. I find most Atmos sound mixes masochistic and overbearing, not to mention distracting. But for Dune, this approach simply works. That may be because the imagery is so captivating that no amount of offscreen audio could pull my attention away from the screen, but I also think it’s due to thoughtful mixing and a deep understanding of the relationship between picture and sound. Whatever the reason, it all simply works, and there’s not much else to say about the sound.

Well, there is one more thing, although I do run the risk of angering some readers here, especially fans of composer Hans Zimmer. I’ve rarely if ever understood the appeal of most of Zimmer’s work. I often find his compositions fatiguing, uninteresting, and so utterly and needlessly aggressive that I need to wipe the testosterone residue from my speakers after watching a film he’s scored. And make no mistake here: his score for Dune is bombastic at times, what with its heavy reliance on percussion and synths. 

But this is unquestionably his best score since 1994’s The Lion King, and it succeeds for most of the same reasons. Zimmer understood the assignment here, and his music works in conjunction with the visuals and the narrative in such a way that they’re inseparable. I’ve had the score on repeat throughout the writing of this review, simply because I cannot shake it. It haunts me. Its leitmotifs—both melodic and percussion—resonate with me in a way that few Zimmer scores ever have. And most tellingly, as I’m listening to it, I can close my eyes and see the accompanying moments from the film. And this is a film I’ve only seen once, mind you. That’s the mark of a great score. 

Put it all together, and I have next to nothing critical to say about Dune as a work of cinema in and of itself. There are a few edits in the first act that feel a bit choppy. By that I mean that even if you’re completely unfamiliar with the story you’ll no doubt sense that much of what was excised from the assembly cut to get the film down to a tight 2 hours and 38 minutes was removed from the first third. 

There’s also the fact that, while the bulk of the performances are truly world-class, Dave Bautista feels out of place here. I’m a fan of Bautista’s, but his portrayal of Rabban Harkonnen—the nephew of the baron who previously ruled the desert planet that gives Dune its name—feels one-note and over-the-top, at least when compared with the nuanced performances turned in by literally everyone else. Other than those quibbles, Dune is a monumental work of art in its own right.

But what about its effectiveness as an adaptation of the supposedly unfilmable novel? Well, it’s not perfect in that respect but it’s infinitely better than I could ever hoped for. Villeneuve—unlike David Lynch and John Harrison (who directed the 2000 mini-series)—has boiled the narrative down to its essence rather than haphazardly and erratically chopping the story into bit-sized pieces. He was able to distill that essence because he understands that essence. 

Dune works as a novel because of its complexity. In writing the book, Herbert explored the many ways in which ecology influences and drives every aspect of the human experience, from the personal to the familial to the societal, political, and religious institutions that shape our lives. It’s also a novel that takes place largely between the ears of its characters, something no film could successfully replicate (although, bless his heart, David Lynch tried and failed spectacularly to do so). 

With his film adaptation of the first two-thirds or thereabouts of the novel, Villeneuve had no choice but to tidy up some of its tangled narrative threads, and he made the wise choice to focus on the personal and familial above all else. The Dune geek in me laments the de-emphasis on the ecological and environmental. But the cinephile in me can’t imagine how he could have possibly explored that aspect of the novel entirely without turning his film into a never-ending barrage of exposition dumps. 

Then again, there’s a lot about this adaptation I never could have imagined before seeing it. There are aspects of the novel I never expected to see translated to the screen, much less this effectively or artfully. 

And the fact that Villeneuve managed to capture so much of the book’s essential fiber without creating a big pile of confusion for the uninitiated is a bit of a miracle. After the credits rolled, my wife—who has never read the novel and before now had no interest in doing so—turned to me and said, “I expected to be lost, but I never was. There’s so much more I want to know, so many questions I want answered. But in the moment, watching the film, I didn’t feel like I was missing anything. Well, except for the fact that I feel like there’s a reason why Duke Leto never married Lady Jessica and I wish the film had explored that.”

And in that respect, she’s absolutely correct. Armed with my deep knowledge of the book, I also feel like there are a couple other things the film could have conveyed better, such as the ritualistic obsession with moisture inherent to the culture of the Fremen—the nomadic natives of the planet Arrakis, aka “Dune.” But when I quizzed my wife about it, her response was, “No, I definitely picked up on that.” So, perhaps I’m wrong. 

At any rate, now that I’ve experienced the first part of Villeneuve’s intended two-part adaptation, I still have no clue how he’s going to successfully translate the rest of the book to the screen. The rest of the story takes a turn for the weird, to put it lightly. But even if Dune: Part Two ends up being a major flop (assuming it even gets made, although that seems likely), that won’t diminish my appreciation of this first part. 

The narrative may not be complete. As Zendaya’s character Chani cheekily teases just before the credits roll, “This is only the beginning.” But Dune nonetheless manages to feel like a complete story, with an ending that is both emotionally and thematically satisfying, while also pointing toward a much bigger and tantalizing future. 

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 HBO Max presentation is the very definition of reference-quality, with the most effective application of high dynamic range grading to date.

SOUND | The Dolby Atmos soundtrack is so dynamic that you can only pity the unfortunate souls who attempt to experience it through a soundbar or basic home theater speaker setup.

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Review: The Alpinist

The Alpinist (2021)

review | The Alpinist

What starts out as a documentary on a young mountain climber changes midstream into a meditation on the filmmaking process itself

by Dennis Burger
November 27, 2021

There is a well-known phenomenon in physics called the observer effect, a recognition of the fact that observing a thing fundamentally changes that thing—that by merely attempting to know more about something, you’re disturbing that something to the point where it’s no longer the thing you wished to know more about. And for the first half-hour or so of The Alpinist—a new documentary about mountain-climber Marc-André Leclerc—that’s all I could really think about. 

It’s just as easy to see, though, that Leclerc has absolutely no interest in being the subject of a documentary film. Not that he’s hostile to the filmmakers in any way. He’s a kind and gentle young man with an infectiously awkward charm. You just can’t help but get the sense that this intrinsically motivated iconoclast can’t understand why anyone would want to make a film about him. 

Right around that 30-minute mark, though, you forget about all that. It’s here that the filmmakers document Leclerc free-climbing the Stanley Headwall, a treacherous ascent that results in some of the most vertigo-inducing footage in the entire film. It’s a slow and, at first, frustrating scene. I could feel my pulse rising as Leclerc methodically tested the ice and rock in search of handholds and footholds as he hung precariously by his heels and fingertips over certain death. 

The odd thing, though, is that you’d expect the tension to ramp up as the scene goes on but exactly the opposite is true. Leclerc’s Zen mentality becomes infectious. The inner peace he attains during his mindful climb practically radiates from the screen. And in this moment, with no real commentary from the filmmakers, no voiceovers, no monologuing of any sort, you finally understand this introverted soul. It is without question the best example of “Show, don’t tell” I’ve seen in a documentary in quite some time.

And then shortly thereafter, Leclerc disappears. The mobile phone the filmmakers gave him (he’s never owned his own) starts rolling over to voicemail. And it isn’t long before they discover the alpinist decided to solo Mount Robson’s Emperor Face—making him the first in history to do so—without them. “It wouldn’t be a solo if someone is there,” he says, as he calls to kindly but unapologetically explain why he ghosted them. 

He then allows them to film a second “solo” ascent of Emperor Face, and here we get right to the point of what makes The Alpinist such a captivating and interesting documentary. Most filmmakers would have used that footage with no mention of the fact that it was a staged do-over. For Mortimer and Rosen, though, all of this becomes part of the honest account of their time with Marc-André. And it’s somewhere around this point when The Alpinist stops trying to be a film about Leclerc and transforms into a film about trying to make a film about him. 

From that point on, the filmmakers have to make do with whatever footage they can get, which includes what appears to be some cellphone footage self-shot by Leclerc of his dangerous winter ascent of Torre Egger, a peak in the Southern Patagonian ice field in South America that’s dangerous even in the summer months. As a result, The Alpinist doesn’t always look like a slick Hollywood production, and it makes sense that it was only released in HD. Watching Kaleidescape’s 1080p download, I might have seen one or two shots early on that could have benefited from high dynamic range and perhaps a bit of extra resolution. But such shots are by far the exception.  

Kaleidescape’s presentation does the film justice, though, delivering it without any artifacts that weren’t present in the source footage. It’s somewhat surprising that the professionally shot imagery made it through the production and compression pipeline without any banding, especially in some of the shots of open, impossibly blue skies, but such is the case. The Alpinist may be a hodgepodge of disparate sources but it’s a visually captivating film nonetheless, and one that deserves to be seen on the best screen in your home. 

The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack, meanwhile, won’t stress the dynamic capabilities of your audio system, but it always works in service of the film, with good atmospheric effects in the surround channels but with way more emphasis on a solid front soundstage and exceptional dialogue intelligibility, even in conditions you wouldn’t think would be conducive to such. 

Frankly, though, I don’t think many viewers will be focused on the audiovisual presentation, lest they go in expecting a documentary about mountain climbing, because The Alpinist isn’t that film. It starts off as a documentary about a baffling young man, then becomes a documentary about trying to document the life of that young man, and in the process, it becomes a film with a strong philosophical bent. I started it wondering why and how anyone could live like Leclerc—in a tent in the woods, an upgrade from his former residence in a stairwell, disconnected from modern conveniences—but by the end, I found myself envying his freedom and his mindful approach to lived experiences. The Alpinist may not be a neat and tidy film, and it breaks most of the rules of documentary filmmaking. But it is nevertheless—or perhaps as a result—one of the most moving and fascinating documentaries I’ve seen in ages. 

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 presentation does the film justice, delivering it without any artifacts that weren’t present in the source footage.

SOUND | The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack won’t stress the dynamic capabilities of your system but it always works in service of the film, with good atmospheric effects in the surround channels, a solid front soundstage, and exceptional dialogue intelligibility.

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I Hope Marvel Never Makes Another WandaVision

I Hope Marvel Never Makes Another Wandavision

I Hope Marvel Never Makes Another WandaVision

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Coming from history’s most successful superhero franchise, you’d except to see a sequel to this Disney+ series—that would be a really bad idea

by Dennis Burger
March 11, 2021

As I’ve said before (so much that regular readers are probably getting sick of hearing it), Captain America: The Winter Soldier changed everything for the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It showed us how MCU movies could rise above the tropes and trappings of superhero cinema, and it gave the movies that followed it the freedom to play around with genre in interesting ways. If Winter Soldier hadn’t worked and hadn’t connected with audiences, I don’t think we would have WandaVision today. I just don’t think Marvel would have had the courage to make it.

But WandaVision changes everything yet again, showing that you can take the single most mainstream intellectual property in the world and get abstract with it. You can experiment; you can out-bizarre Twin Peaks and still hang onto your fanboy audience, many of whom latch onto the MCU for no other reason than the wish-fulfillment/power-trip aspect of it all. 

Well, you can hang onto a lot of them. I have to admit, geeky though I may be, I’ve pretty much divorced myself from geek culture since the release of Star Wars: The Last Jedi—mostly due to the toxicity of it all, but also because the loudest contingent of fantasy/sci-fi fans on the internet no more understands the properties they love to wax neck-beardedly about than my American Staffordshire Terrier understands quantum chromodynamics. 

The few discussions I’ve seen about WandaVision, now that it’s over, frustrate and infuriate me in equal measure because here we have a story that cuts straight to the heart of what it means to be human in a way no film or series of any genre has in ages, and the only things the Comic-Con crowd wants to discuss are why Mephisto didn’t make an appearance or whether Agatha’s rabbit familiar, Señor Scratchy, is secretly her son Nicholas Scratch from the comic books. 

All fun topics to talk about, mind you, as frivolous as they may be. But can we take a breather from the soap-opera discussions to focus on what made WandaVision legitimately good? Can we appreciate that the company known for making movies about dudes fighting robots in their pajamas had the courage to tell a story in which the primary antagonists are grief, pain, cognitive dissonance, and consequences? And not physical manifestations thereof, but the actual human emotions?

Can we maybe take a breather from geeking out over the big action set-pieces to appreciate the fact that the biggest knock-down, drag-out battle in the finale was won not with fists or laser eyes, but a philosophical argument centered on the Ship of Theseus? Can we talk about the fact that, as weird as the first half of WandaVision was, it avoided the biggest sins of Twin Peaks by knowing when to back off the eccentricities, lest they lose their value?

I’m not saying WandaVision was perfect. I found it more than a bit disappointing when the penultimate episode overexplained too many of the series’ earlier abstractions, assuming I suppose that some of its audience may not have been able to connect the dots for themselves. But such slip-ups are few and far between, which is surprising for a show that works on so many levels. 

WandaVision is a story about struggling with grief and the toll that can take on those around us. It’s also a meditation on our weird relationship with media—how we influence it and how it influences us, both overtly and subliminally. It’s a clever examination of shifting cultural norms and how what we accept as normal today is as much a manipulated affectation as any of the tropes of the past. 

The series’ strengths lie in its uniqueness. And you could point to previous films it resembles in the most obvious of ways, such as Pleasantville and The Truman Show, but such similarities are mostly superficial (except, of course, for the latter’s framing of tragedy disguised as comedy, which this show appropriates with devastating effectiveness). WandaVision is, of all its references and call-backs, its own thing, which is why I’m worried it’s going to be used as a template, now that it has proven successful. 

I’m already seeing fans start to beg for a second season, and Marvel’s suits are being coy in their responses—and that terrifies me. As a lifelong fan of these characters—one who’s smitten with how they’ve been interpreted for screens large and small—I obviously want to see their stories continued. I’m as invested as could be. But I want to see Paul Bettany and Lizzie Olsen portraying Vision and the Scarlet Witch in new stories, told in new ways, not awkwardly fumbling around with attempts at capturing lighting in a bottle.

WandaVision was perhaps the most satisfying and self-contained narrative I’ve seen unfold in ages. And now it’s over; it’s done; there’s no more of this story to tell. But that doesn’t mean someone won’t try to replicate it. And if you need evidence of that, just look at the number of new streaming services that have come out in the past year with meaningless “+” symbols stapled onto the end of their names. 

Yes, yes, I know—a streaming service and a TV series are not the same thing, but Hollywood has a knack for aping what works without understanding why it works. When Disney+ launched back in 2019, that binary operator at the end of its name actually meant something. It was shorthand for Disney + Pixar + Star Wars + Marvel + National Geographic. What the hell does Apple TV+ connote—much less Paramount+, the new name for the streaming service formerly known as CBS All Access? Paramount + what, exactly? 

In keeping with that entertainment-industry tradition, it stands to reason we’ll eventually see at least a few feeble attempts at replicating the self-referential, heartfelt-story-framed-as-classic-sitcom container in which WandaVision was delivered, with no thought given to what that device actually meant in the context of this story. 

The most I can hope for is that Marvel doesn’t attempt to scrape this barrel again, and certainly not with these characters, because wishing for anything more than that would be like Charlie Brown, facing that football once more, hoping beyond hope that Lucy doesn’t yank it away at the last second.

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.

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Review: The Green Knight

The Green Knight

review | The Green Knight

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David Lowery’s take on the medieval legend is both faithful and revisionist, and sumptuously gorgeous throughout

by Dennis Burger
August 26, 2021

There are, as best I can tell, three main reasons one might adapt an Arthurian legend for the silver screen. The first—and I submit Guy Ritchie’s awful Legend of the Sword as Exhibit A—could best be described as an attempt to create a crowd-pleasing modern action blockbuster with a built-in audience for which the director has little respect. 

The second—and I’ll submit John Boorman’s well-intentioned and engaging but overwrought Excalibur as Exhibit B—generally boils down to a desire to create a fantasy film and recognition of the fact that there are fewer legal barriers to entry when adapting works in the public domain. 

The third main impulse for adapting such works largely comes from a desire to illuminate, interpret, and start a discussion about why these stories still hold such sway in the modern mind. David Lowery’s The Green Knight largely falls under this umbrella.

I say “largely,” because it’s a difficult film to pin down. It’s partly a screen adaptation of the famous 14th Century epic poem, but partly a commentary on it. Even as I finish typing that, though, it feels wrong. The Green Knight isn’t so much commentary as it is a prompt for conversation, exploration, and reexamination of the source material. It’s more a question than an answer. 

It is, in many ways, Lowery’s way of telling the audience what this story means to him, and what lessons he thinks there are for modern audiences to learn in its medieval text. Interesting as that is, though, far more interesting is the room Lowery leaves the viewer to reflect on their own relationship with the poem and its place in the modern world. 

If you haven’t guessed from all the above rambling, The Green Knight is at times a very abstract work of cinema. Those unfamiliar with the source will likely be lost occasionally, and those more familiar with the poem will just as likely be pushed off balance by the elements of the original that Lowery is slavishly faithful to, those that he elides and expands, and the unrelated medieval legends he weaves into his narrative to reinforce the themes he wants to accentuate. It’s a weird mix of reverence and revisionism that certainly won’t be to everyone’s taste.

The one thing we can all agree on is that this is a sumptuously gorgeous film. There are long stretches that can only be described as pure audiovisual experience, and with the benefit of Theater at Home delivery via Vudu, I found myself tempted at times to reach for my remote and pause the film just to get lost in the perfect composition of a frame, the lushness of the colors, the richness of the contrasts, and the depth of the shadow detail. I resisted that temptation, since this is a work intended to be viewed in motion. But the temptation was there. 

Shot in 6.5K and finished in a 4K digital intermediate, the imagery is packed to the gills with detail of the sort that actually enhances the experience rather than merely throwing more pixels at your screen. Despite the judicious and effective employment of CGI, the film also relies on some old-school tricks of the trade, seemingly as a reminder that this isn’t an alternate reality to which you can escape but rather a piece of art on which to reflect. In Vudu’s Dolby Vision presentation, you can clearly see the reliance on matte paintings, an artform that Hollywood has been poorer for since abandoning. 

It’s true that there are a number of low-contrast shots throughout, especially low-light sequences photographed indoors with natural light, which means blacks aren’t always the inkiest and the image flattens out a bit, especially when compared with the most dramatic outdoor shots. But all of this seems intentional, and the dynamic metadata of Dolby Vision allows for each new shot to be tone-mapped to the capabilities of your display. Long story short, this is one of the few films I’ve seen recently where Dolby Vision isn’t merely a technical nicety but a borderline necessity to keep the image from devolving into a puddle of indistinct grays in a handful of shots. 

There are a few fleeting moments of banding in Vudu’s streaming rental (less than one second in total, I reckon), but I’m half-convinced this banding is baked into the master. And I say this because the opening scene—with its eye-reactive highlights and deep shadows and the quick transitions between those two extremes—is the sort of image you would forgive for being a bit banded even on full-bandwidth UHD Blu-ray. But I didn’t see a hint of such. 

The expanded gamut of Dolby Vision also effectively captures the nuances of cinematographer Andrew Droz Palermo’s imagery, adding some additional richness to the fabrics and foliage and conveying in seconds what the original poet sometimes took multiple stanzas to articulate. 

As for the audio, I feel like a bit of a broken record for saying this but once again we have a Premium VOD rental whose levels haven’t been optimized for home cinemas. My best estimation is that it’s mastered about 4.5dB below reference levels, so go ahead and crank up the volume from the giddy-up (assuming you’re renting it via Vudu—other providers might have tweaked the levels). 

I wish I could tell you more about the mix, but I was so hypnotized by the film that I rarely noticed the technical aspects of the sound, aside from the aforementioned stretches that could best be described as pure audiovisual experience. But, measuring things by my personal yardstick, I’d say that’s the mark of really effective sound design. It’s never distracting, but it is carefully orchestrated, thoughtful, and always clear in its delivery of dialogue—assuming, again, that you give your volume knob a bit of a twist to the right. 

For the past few days, since I staked claim to this movie for review, my colleague John Sciacca has been hammering my text-messaging inbox, asking me for my assessment of it. And I’m still not sure I’ve fully made up my mind about the film just yet, nor am I sure I ever will, despite the fact that I’ll be buying it the instant it’s permanently released to home video. 

“Did you like it?” he asked me last night, I suppose tiring of my vacillating and ambivalating. I’m not sure that’s the right question, to be honest. What I will say is: The film continues to haunt me. I simply cannot shake it. It has also, in some not-so-subtle ways, changed my relationship with the text of Sir Gaiwan and the Green Knight. Or, it would be more accurate to say, it has prompted me to reassess that relationship on my own terms. 

I sat down last night to re-read the poem, not through Lowery’s lens, but rather through a lens of my own making that Lowery nudged me into grinding and polishing myself. I reached for Tolkien’s translation, always my first choice for its fidelity and excellent footnotes. A few pages in, though, I found myself longing for something different, something more energetic. So, I put down the Tolkien and picked up my less-well-worn copy of Simon Armitage’s more recent translation, which I’ve never quite been able to give myself over to completely. Something changed after having seen The Green Knight. The immediacy and energy of Armitage’s verse rang truer to me than the scholarly pedanticism of Tolkien. 

Of course, the Professor’s interest in the poem was always more philological, whereas Armitage’s is undeniably more emotional. I can appreciate that now. In fact, as ashamed as I am to admit this, I think I love both translations in equal measure, but for different reasons. 

I’m not sure I ever would have reached that point without having seen The Green Knight. And although I’m not sure this was Lowery’s intention with the film, I’m sure he’d be pleased to hear 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 | The imagery is packed to the gills with detail of the sort that actually enhances the experience rather than merely throwing more pixels at your screen.

SOUND | The sound design is never distracting but carefully orchestrated, thoughtful, and always clear in its delivery of dialogue.

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Review: Last Night in Soho

Last Night in Soho (2021)

review | Last Night in Soho

Subtle, inventive use of the Atmos mix really makes this flashing-back-to-the-’60s thriller come to life

by Dennis Burger
November 27, 2021

Anyone interested in better understanding the art of sound mixing should study the Dolby Atmos soundtrack for Edgar Wright’s Last Night in Soho as if it were the Rosetta Stone. And, yes, I know I’m doing things right backwards here, talking about the sound before discussing the merits of the film itself. But the simple fact is that the shape of sound is so integral to the experience of Soho that leading with anything else would feel wrong. Wright and his sound department employ the expanded soundfield of Atmos in much the way The Wizard of Oz employs Technicolor—although in this case there’s a lot more back-and-forth and the transitions are at times so subtle as to be easily missed. 

And to explain what I’m on about here, I need to tell you a bit about the narrative of the film. Last Night in Soho is the story of Eloise (Thomasin McKenzie), a young country girl who’s noteworthy for two reasons: Firstly, she’s a talented designer who’s been accepted into the London College of Fashion; secondly, she is gifted—or afflicted, depending on your perspective—with psychic abilities very much akin to those of Danny from The Shining. She sees the past as vividly as she sees the present. 

Both of those facts come into play when the introverted Ellie finds herself overwhelmed by dormitory life and rents a room in a quaint but creepy old home, then nearly immediately becomes transported via her dreams into the 1960s, where she alternately observes and embodies a striking young woman named Sandie (Anya Taylor-Joy), who gets mixed up with all the wrong sorts of men in her attempt to make it as a singer. 

And it’s during those transitions between the modern, waking world and Ellie’s dreams/visions that the Atmos mix really springs to life. Until that point, the audio is a largely front-focused affair, with surrounds used mostly for subtle ambience and spaciousness. It honestly wouldn’t make a world of difference if it were straight stereo. And that subdued mixing really works well with the overall aesthetic of the film, which was shot largely on 35mm with a mix of flat and anamorphic lenses, and really evokes the feel of supernatural thrillers from the late ’60s. So much so that elements of the modern world—wireless headphones, current cars—feel like an anachronistic intrusion.  

But when we’re yanked back to the ’60s, the film takes on a much more modern feel, and the Atmos soundscape positively explodes into its full potential, packed with immersive overhead audio effects (mostly musical in nature) and aggressive use of the surround channels. And from here on out, that shift between the flat, enhanced-stereo approach and the full-blown Atmos experience serves as the audience’s primary indicator of whether we’re experiencing the world as Ellie experiences it or the mundane modern world in which she is quickly losing her grasp on reality. 

As I’m writing all of this, I know it sounds like a gimmick. But this trick is so artfully—and at times subtly—orchestrated that it doesn’t feel at all gimmicky in the moment. So if you’re planning on venturing out into a commercial cinema to see Last Night in Soho while it’s still being publicly exhibited, make sure you do so in a one equipped with Atmos. But I imagine most Cineluxe readers will be better served by a good home cinema setup and access to a PVOD rental of the sort Kaleidescape is offering right now. 

Kaleidescape’s download delivers its sumptuous cinematography with all the detail and texture you could hope for, preserving the subtle film grain and wonderfully capturing cinematographer Chung-hoon Chung’s nuanced color palette. As with the audio, the imagery is a study in contrasts, with a predominantly earthy look that’s punctuated by splashes of primary hues and neon lighting. A handful of scenes might have been better served by the enhanced peak brightness and dynamic metadata of Dolby Vision, but Kaleidescape’s HDR10 presentation nonetheless gives the picture a lot of breathing room at the lower end of the value scale, opening up the shadows and giving the image a lot of depth where appropriate. 

And for a film whose substance is tied largely to its style, that’s important. Last Night in Soho won’t be to everyone’s taste, and even if you love it as much as I do, I think you’ll find some flaws with it. Wright attempts to load the film with a bit more meaning than its narrative framework will support. And in paying homage to the whole of the 1960s—from its fashions to its music to the diversity of its cinema, ranging from Polanski to EON Productions—he’s bitten off a bit more than he can chew. All of which makes Last Night in Soho flawed by any objective measure. But it’s one of the most fascinatingly flawed films I’ve seen in ages, which makes it a shoo-in for Day One purchase the instant it’s available on home video proper. 

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 Kaleidescape download delivers the movie’s sumptuous cinematography with all the detail and texture you could hope for.

SOUND | The Atmos soundscape positively explodes into its full potential during the flashback scenes, packed with immersive overhead audio effects and aggressive use of the surround channels.

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Review: The Road Warrior

The Road Warrior (1981)

review | The Road Warrior

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The second Mad Max film looks way better than expected in 4K HDR, and turns out to be a legitimately great action film to boot

by Dennis Burger
December 10, 2021

I’ve spent so many decades enjoying The Road Warrior in all its home video incarnations I’m a little surprised I’ve never stopped to consider whether or not it’s a good film. That’s not entirely unusual for me. Often, the actual quality of a movie has no bearing on my enjoyment thereof, as evidenced by the fact that I’ll watch Berry Gordy’s The Last Dragon any time you put it in front of me. 

So why start worrying about the merits of the second installment of the Mad Max franchise all these years later? The simple fact is that the new 4K HDR remaster forces you to reconsider it. It forces you to actively engage with the material rather than just passively consume it. That’s not to say it’s a perfect 4K presentation, but it exceeded my wildest expectations for what could be done with this source material. 

For one thing, the colors in Kaleidescape’s HDR10 presentation boast a level of purity and vibrancy I never would have guessed were locked within the negative. Secondaries in particular boast warmth that was hinted at in the old LaserDisc release but seems to have fallen by the wayside in transfers done since. Skin tones are delightfully sunbaked but still believable, at least in HDR10. (And I make that distinction because I turned off the HDR capabilities of my display as a quick test, and the color palette instantly became overbaked and cartoonish, so don’t judge the look of the film based on any screenshots that accompany this review. It needs to be seen in 10-bit color to be appreciated.)

Contrasts and black levels have also been improved substantially, which gives the image a depth and dimensionality that is astonishing at times, especially compared with the flatness and drabness of the Blu-ray. But by far the biggest improvements come from the increased resolution, which unlocks textures and details I’ve never seen in The Road Warrior. 

I don’t mean to imply that the film now looks like a modern work of cinema. Its low-budget, independent, early-’80s origins are still utterly evident. But what Warner Bros. has accomplished with this new remaster is, for the most part, staggering.

I say “for the most part” because there are some choices that irk me. While the bulk of the film exhibits a healthy level of coarse grain, most of the optical shots and some of the nighttime sequences have been scrubbed to the point of silliness, resulting in a sort of waxy artificiality that’s distracting. Thankfully, those oversteps are by far the exception rather than the rule. I also wish whoever had their hands on the knobs hadn’t aimed for such consistency with the black levels, which are perfectly fine for 99% of the film and give the image that pop it has long lacked but which tiptoe right up to the edge of being crushed in a handful of scenes. 

Other than that, the high-dynamic-range grade is spot-on for this sort of material. There are a few instances of high specular brightness—for example, the dollops of flame in the scene in which Max scopes out the oil-refinery camp—but for the most part the HDR seems to be more about adding nuance to the color palette than pushing your display to extremes of brightness, which is fitting. 

If you’re at all a Mad Max fan, you’ve no doubt heard about some controversy surrounding the audio mix for this 4K HDR release. In case you haven’t, here’s the short version: The film is accompanied by a Dolby Atmos remix that contains some new sound effects. And while Warner promised that the UHD Blu-ray would also include the original stereo soundtrack, the 2.0 mix included on the disc is actually a downmix of the new Atmos track. 

Warner has pulled all physical copies of the film off store shelves and will issue a corrected disc in 2022 as production pipelines allow. But the Kaleidescape download of the film lacks a stereo track entirely, so that particular controversy doesn’t apply here. Your only options are the new Atmos track and a 5.1 down-mix thereof. 

As a huge fan of the film (I’ve watched it twice this year already on Blu-ray, before I knew it was coming in 4K), I think this brouhaha is incredibly overblown. The Atmos mix is an improvement over the original stereo as well as the 5.1 mix that accompanied the Blu-ray release. Yes, there are some added effects, and yes, there’s a good bit more subwoofer-shaking bass. But you know what? It all just works. 

For the most part, the new audio elements remove distractions rather than sticking out like a sore thumb, and the mix is still predominantly true to both the stereo and six-track magnetic mixes of the original release. In fact, the only times you’ll likely be aware of any significant surround or overhead activity is in the opening shot—in which the camera pulls back from within the supercharger of Max’s iconic GT Falcon—as well as the scene in which Humungus’ biker gang attacks the oil-refinery camp. 

Dialogue is still a little dodgy in spots and Brian May’s score still sounds a little too hi-fi in comparison with the rest of the audio elements. But don’t let controversies about the new track keep you away from this 4K HDR release, assuming you’re interested to begin with.

To get back to my original point, it turns out The Road Warrior is actually a damned good action film. Who knew? In the dozens upon dozens of times I’ve watched it, I’ve largely ignored this fact. But it’s legitimately a tidy and poignant morality play that grapples with both the best and worst of human nature, shining a light on our capacity for violence without actually glorifying that violence, which is no mean feat. George Miller hadn’t quite yet honed his gift for narrative economy—certainly not to the degree on display in Fury Road—but there’s still a lot going on here beneath the surface. 

And in its new 4K HDR presentation, the film looks—with a few momentary exceptions—as good as I can imagine it ever looking, short of a ground-up restoration, which I’m not sure is entirely warranted or even possible.  

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 colors in Kaleidescape’s HDR10 presentation boast a level of purity and vibrancy no one could have guessed was locked within the negative.

SOUND | Dialogue is still a little dodgy in spots and Brian May’s score still sounds a little too hi-fi, but the new Atmos mix is an improvement over the original stereo as well as the 5.1 mix that accompanied the Blu-ray release.

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