|

|
|
|
Vantage
Point
A
marvelously frantic suspense movie about a presidential assassination
attempt, Vantage Point, has been issued by Sony Pictures Home
Entertainment. The film has several famous stars in smallish roles,
but the hero is a recovering Secret Service agent, played by Dennis
Quaid, who may have been called back to duty too soon after defending
the president from a previous attempt. William Hurt is the president,
and Forest Whitaker, Matthew Fox, and Sigourney Weaver
are also featured in the 2007 production. The 90-minute movie's primary
gimmick is that the actual story occurs during a relatively brief period
of time-about a half hour, total-but the film replays the incident from
different character viewpoints. There are six of these segments. The
first five run about 10 minutes each and then the final one, which has
multiple viewpoints, runs about 30 minutes. The filmmakers do cheat
the chronology a little, and when you stop to think about the coincidences
and the central premise, the movie may seem a little silly. Nevertheless,
it doesn't take more than the first few minutes to get totally wrapped
up in the intrigue and excitement as the story barrels ahead, rolls
back, and then barrels ahead again, while your disbelief stands panting
in the street, unable to catch up.
The picture is presented
in letterboxed format only, with an aspect ratio of about 2.35:1 and
an accommodation for enhanced 16:9 playback. The color transfer is sharp.
The 5.1-channel Dolby Digital sound accentuates the action effectively
and has plenty of power. There is an alternate French track in standard
stereo and alternate Spanish, Portuguese and Thai tracks in 5.1 Dolby,
along with optional English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Korean,
and Thai subtitles. There is a decent 27-minute production documentary,
an even better 16-minute piece that goes over how the script was developed,
a fine 7-minute piece about the stunts and a minute-long blooper gag.
After the production
featurettes, director Pete Travis doesn't really have much to
add in his commentary track. He never goes into too much detail, but
talks in general terms about how various scenes were staged and how
things were altered in the editing room.
As the sound enhances
the film's excitement, so does the Blu-ray release deliver even more
thrills than the DVD. Rear channel directional effects, clearer details
and deeper, better rounded power add considerably to a viewer's involvement
in the action scenes and the story as a whole. There are four alternate
language tracks and eight subtitling tracks including English. The special
features that appear on the DVD are all included, and there is an additional
feature that is fun, but really more promising for what it represents
than what it delivers. Since most of the movie is set in a relatively
confined location (it takes place in Spain, although a lot of it was
shot in Mexico City), the BD allows you to bring up a schematic at the
bottom of the screen that tracks each major character's location and
alternate viewpoints. It isn't always present-which also leads to the
suspicion that the filmmakers are cheating here and there-but it reinforces
the movie's basic concept in an entertaining manner.
August 21, 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