The
Top Ten
DVDs and BDs of 2008
With the elimination of a competing format, 2008 saw the establishment
of the backwards compatible Blu-ray (BD) system as the high-end subset
of the DVD format. While it is less flexible and does not offer significant
improvements in supplementary features (except enhanced interactivity
and an ability to connect with other fans of a title online), the BD's
sound and picture advantages are spectacular. For enthusiasts who have
more than two speakers in their living rooms or a monitor that exceeds
45 diagonal inches, the improvements offered by the format are well
worth the investment (although, beware-most newcomers will end up wanting
to upgrade their receivers/amplifiers in tandem with obtaining a player).
2008 also saw the proliferation of the dissemination of copies of a
title (within DVD and BD sets) that can be downloaded onto computers,
iPods, cell phones and so on, thereby expanding one aspect of the format's
flexibility at the same time it is being constricted on the other end.
Hence, DVDs themselves are by no means dead and will not be so for some
time to come. In order to achieve the improvements of picture and sound,
a BD platter cannot hold much more of a film than a DVD already holds
(although movies that had to be split onto two DVD platters do, comfortably,
fit onto one BD platter; so far, however, the releases of TV episodes
have mirrored the four-to-a-platter DVD design). As the BD penetration
increases, some producers will undoubtedly decide to compromise image
quality in favor of squeezing more titles onto one platter, just as
there are sets of DVDs now that offer scores of public domain genre
titles in moderately sized and priced boxed sets. The economic logic
behind manufacturing or purchasing a BD title that does not attract
viewers in part because of its picture or sound components, however,
remains questionable. While classic movies with a strong artistic component,
such as The Third Man, are unquestionably worth upgrading to BD, popular
but ordinary movies, like Dumb and Dumber, are not so much so.
Hence, in assessing
the best DVD releases of 2008, the BD format has been singled out only
if it offers a significant programming or playback improvement over
its DVD counterpart. When both formats are cited, the BD is preferable,
but the DVD still offers essentially the same value and quality, particularly
if you just want to watch the movie in your bedroom at night without
disturbing the rest of the house. DVDs and BDs may well end up existing
side by side until a scheme to download high-end video playback replaces
them both.
The following represent
the most exciting releases and trends of 2008:
1. The Dark Knight
(Blu-ray, Warner)
Only the Blu-ray presentation incorporates the film's extensive IMAX
footage in its playback (the DVD presents the IMAX material as a separate
special feature), with the aspect ratio shifting between the dazzling
action scenes that utilize the enhanced IMAX focal detail and the standard
widescreen images to keep a viewer's adrenaline pumping. Although the
release has a collection of decent but still primarily token supplementary
features, the quality of the BD's picture and sound transfer is so thrilling,
and dovetails so well with movie's own intelligent exposition, that
if sales of the Blu-ray system have not exploded in tandem with the
blockbuster's release, then they never will.
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2. How the West
Was Won (Blu-ray, Warner)
The previous releases of the classic 1962 Cinerama western combined
the three Cinerama panels to present the image with awkward lines dividing
it, sometimes unevenly, in thirds. The new transfer makes the image
looks seamless, and has also sharpened the colors and strengthened the
sound, enhancing the entertainment significantly. Along with the film,
there are retrospective documentaries, a commentary track and an excellent
history of the Cinerama process. Unique to the BD release, there is
an additional presentation of the film in what is called 'SmileBox'
format, ostensibly designed for curved screens, in which the edges of
the image are taller than the middle. You don't need a curved screen
however, because with the resolution solidity of the Blu-ray format,
you can sit very close to a regular widescreen monitor and the curved
image will accommodate your peripheral vision anyway, conveying a remarkable
sense of depth, without distortion. Hence, it is actually called 'SmileBox'
because as it plays, you cannot help but to grin from ear to ear for
the movie watching experience it brings you.
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3. Hellboy II The Golden Army (DVD and Blu-ray, Universal)
Many movies, and particularly movies based on comic books, are full
of elaborate special effects, but that's what they look like, elaborate
special effects. Guillermo Del Toro's fully entertaining Hellboy
comic book sequel, however, is so adeptly scripted and executed that
the special effects deliver the pleasures they are intended to deliver
without taking the viewer out of the movie. The images are creative
and the action is witty, and the film is ideally suited for DVD and
especially Blu-ray, where the audio detail is extensively engaging.
Del Toro is also enthusiastic about the home video concept, and so the
supplementary features are exhaustive, including two commentary tracks
and about three hours of behind-the-scenes footage.
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4. The Godfather
The Coppola Restoration (DVD and Blu-ray, Paramount)
Although The Godfather (and the rest of the trilogy) was released
previously-and except for some token retrospective documentaries, the
bulk of the supplementary features are simply carried forward from that
earlier release-the picture and sound transfer on the new release is
so exquisite that the previous release must be tossed away immediately
in favor of this replacement. It isn't just that the colors are more
accurate and the sound is better detailed. Each scene has been enhanced
emotionally by the improvements, so that the already classic film becomes
that much richer and more captivating. The DVD looks and sounds fantastic,
but the BD is definitive.
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5. Vampyr (DVD, Criterion)
Every year The Criterion Collection releases two-dozen or more outstanding
DVDs and the only challenge here is to pick out the one that is the
best of the best. Carl Theodor Dreyer's mesmerizing 1932 horror
film has in the past been compromised by video transfers that were so
bad, fans had to guess at the film's true appeal through a haze of deterioration
and neglect. The fabulous two-platter presentation, however, redresses
those flaws and presents the movie in its true light-that it is as great
as the Universal horror films being produced during the same era and
is less impacted by age than any of them. Along with a commentary, there
is an excellent deconstruction of the film's images, a profile of Dreyer
and other features.
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6. El Cid
(DVD, Weinstein)
Most fans will forgive the narrative and emotional flaws in epic movies
because the experience of viewing a big-budget extravaganza is in itself
a rare and memorable experience. There are not that many times in the
history of the cinema that talented producers have managed to gather
a great enough investment to create a widescreen, costumed adventure
full of action, passion and at least a nod to real historical events.
The release of Samuel Bronston's grand production directed by
Anthony Mann, which was shot in Spain in the early 1960s (as
well as Weinstein's parallel release of Bronston and Mann's Fall
of the Roman Empire), has been long awaited, and the DVD lives up
to the event of its release. The transfer is outstanding, and emphasizes
the film's 'movieness,' which is central to its appeal. The film is
also accompanied by excellent supplements that chronicle the production
and profile Bronston, who, as a corollary to his filmmaking efforts,
almost single handedly brought Spain out of post-War political and economic
isolation.
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7. Budd Boetticher
Collection (DVD, Sony)
Every DVD company puts out collections of some sort. The best collections
are not simply repackaged bundles of individual DVDs undergoing a clearance
sale. They are, instead, a grouping of titles that have a common appeal
and are more attractive as a group than they might be individually.
Even Criterion has gotten into the act with their superb 'Eclipse' series,
resurrecting films of Yasujiro Ozu, Ernst Lubitsch, Samuel Fuller
and others that would not so readily attract collectors if they were
issued separately, and Fox followed its 2007 release of John Ford movies
with a similarly gargantuan gathering of F.W. Murnau and Frank Borzage
films. The Boetticher collection, however, provides a unique opportunity
to present five westerns that the director made with the magnificently
aged Randolph Scott during a brief explosion of incredibly competent
creativity in the late 1950s. Not one of the films-The Tall T, Ride
Lonesome, Comanche Station, Buchanan Rides Alone and Decision
at Sundown-runs longer than 80 minutes, so they can be comfortably
viewed in a single day, although each one is so utterly entertaining
that it is probably better to stretch out the viewing schedule, in order
to savor the memory of every adventure after it is concluded. Three
of the films are accompanied by commentaries, all have retrospective
featurettes, and The Tall T platter also includes an excellent
biographical portrait of Boetticher. For movie collectors and fans,
it is a stampede of delights, and the sheer pleasure awaiting those
who have never seen the movies before is enviable.
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8. George Méliès
First Wizard of Cinema 1896-1913 (DVD, Flicker Alley)
The contributions DVDs have made to cinema have been many-faceted, and
one great breakthrough they have enabled is the ability to gather and
disseminate comprehensive selections of a single type of film, so that
even enthusiasts who are not dedicated scholars can immerse themselves
in a set of movies that will not only provide basic entertainment, but
will instill an awareness of how the art of motion pictures developed
and advanced-an awareness that increases the viewer's appreciation of
the ways movies manipulate emotions. Méliès was a stage
magician and the innovations he brought to motion pictures (film was
being used, universally by other filmmakers at the time, as a documentary
tool) were the natural applications of stagecraft and sleights-of-hand
to film, with the added trickery that film enabled-editing, and superimposition,
such as in his masterpiece, the joyful A Trip to the Moon. The
outstanding five-platter set, containing 173 of the still existing 202
films created by Méliès (as well as a half-hour biographical
portrait), and will enable any fan with a passing interest in the birth
of cinema to understand and enjoy the works of one of its most important
founding artists.
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9. Battlestar
Gallactica The Complete Third Season
(DVD, Universal)
It becomes more tempting every year to construct a secondary 'Ten Best'
list consisting only of television programs, and more challenging every
year to keep up with all of the outstanding collections that have become
available. Even when a TV series is issued without embellishments, it
seems that the DVD format is better suited than the broadcast format
for its presentation if it is at all decently produced (it is only shows
that have redundant plots or other shortcomings that will work better
when you have to take a week's break between each episode). The best
TV collections combine unique character explorations and narrative flexibility
(which, because of the length of presentation and the economics of production,
the best television shows can do better than theatrical films), with
exhaustive supplementary features that also take advantage of the extended
programming scope. Battlestar Gallactica also has the advantage
of being a splashy, effects-heavy sci-fi show, which looks and sounds
terrific on DVD, while delivering penetrating stories about sympathetic
terrorists and other only slightly veiled parables of contemporary life.
Each episode has an informative commentary, the DVD is loaded with more
than an hour of deleted scenes, and a key episode is presented with
extensive and rewarding footage that could not be squeezed into its
broadcast time slot. In effect, the series broadcast was just the teaser
for the DVD.
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10. Cloverfield
(DVD and Blu-ray, Paramount)
A film that is, by design, more palatable on the confines of a TV screen
than in the expanse of a theatrical screen, the nightmare dreamscape
the ingenious makers of Cloverfield created is ideally suited
for DVD playback (the BD playback is preferable, but not obligatory).
There is just enough dimensionality to the audio track that it can tweak
the viewer's nerves without spoiling the film's central conceit, that
it is all being recorded, basically in real time, by its characters,
as a monster destroys Manhattan. There is also some interesting alternate
footage, and an excellent commentary by director Matt Reeves,
who essentially explains that the film is about the necessity of focusing
on the important people in your life, because you never know when an
unexpected event will take them away from you, whether that event has
four legs or just four wheels.
December 30,
2008
DVD
Roundup: This Week's DVD Releases
The
Review Vault
- by
Douglas Pratt
Douglas Pratt's DVD-Laser Disc Newsletter
is published monthly.
For a free sample, call (516)594-9304 or go to his website at www.DVDLaser.com