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Category:    Home > Reviews > Horror > Thriller > Monster > Halloween (1978/Umbrella Region Free Import Blu-ray)/Shark Night (2011/Fox Blu-ray)

Halloween (1978/Umbrella Region Free Import Blu-ray)/Shark Night (2011/Fox Blu-ray)

 

Picture: B-     Sound: B     Extras: B+/C-     Main Programs: B+/C-

 

 

PLEASE NOTE: This Halloween Blu-ray is Region Free, plays on all Blu-ray players worldwide (save the PAL low def TV ads) and can be ordered from our friends at Umbrella Entertainment at the website address provided at the end of the review.

 

 

These new Blu-ray releases are here as the new year arrives.

 

 

John Carpenter’s Halloween (1978) has been finally issued years later in Australia as a Region Free Import Blu-ray from Umbrella Entertainment, but it has long been an infamous U.S. Blu-ray release you can read more about at this link:

 

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/6153/Halloween+(1978/Anchor+Bay+Blu-ray

 

 

This is almost the same disc with the same extras, but the image has aged badly and we get a change in the sound.  While the U.S. Blu-ray has PCM 5.1 mix, this edition replaces that with a Dolby TrueHD 5.1 mix that may be ever so slightly more refined and less distorted.  That may not be enough to go out of your way to get this edition, but diehard collectors will want to have it and it will likely be the best way the film sounds until the owners spend money on a new 4K or 6K transfer that gets the color schemes correct and more new technology (lossless mixing) could even clean the sound up a tad more. 

 

 

David R. Ellis’ Shark Night (2011) is an attempt by the director of the first of many idiotic Final Destination films to do his answer to Jaws, but it is not even as fun as the recent Piranha 3D (reviewed elsewhere on this site) as yet another group of young adults make the mistake of enjoying sex, nature and go into the water.  Joel David Moore and (as a police officer) Donal Logue were the only actors I recognized, but as much as I did not like this predictable, silly romp, the actors had chemistry for a change and the script did not have hatred and contempt for them wishing they were dead upon arrival as most such releases have offered since the torture porn cycle arrived.  However, the digital work is silly, they cannot find anything new to do and a corruption subplot does not work and is no match for the underrated Barracuda (also reviewed on this site).  See it for chuckles if you are a really, really big fan of this kind of thing.

So you would think the 1080p 1.85 X 1 AVC @ 22 MBPS digital High Definition image transfer on Shark would look better than a film from 1978 in a questionable print (33 years ago) but it is on the soft side, has its share of motion blur and never develops much of a memorable look, which is often a hallmark of killer fish movies.  I can say that the DTS-HD MA (Master Audio) 5.1 lossless mix was better, but not perfect and nothing special save that it is well recorded enough and warm, but nothing to write home about.  The combination is good if not great.  Extras include a Digital Copy for PC and PC portable devices and four short featurettes on the production.

 

 

As noted above, you can order the Halloween import exclusively from Umbrella at:

 

http://www.umbrellaent.com.au/

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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