
Edge
Of Tomorrow
(2014/Live
Die Repeat/Warner
Blu-ray w/DVD)
Picture:
A/B- Sound: A/B- Extras: B Film: A-
NOTE:
This review pertains to the 2D release and not the 3D (which is also
available)
One
of this year's best Science Fiction/Action films is director Doug
Liman's Edge
of Tomorrow
starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt (who has never looked better in
my opinion). The film has some of the best digital effects,
costumes, and production design seen in recent history (the aliens
are creepy and unlike anything we have seen before surprisingly) and
a fast paced story along with the rarity of great character
development.
Based
on the novel All
You Need Is Kill
by Hiroshi Sakurazaka, the film draws inspiration from some previous
works such as Starship
Troopers
(more the book than the Verhoven film), Source Code and Groundhog Day
(with the idea of the same day repeating over and over), and perhaps
even a cue or two from Cruise's previous sci-fi efforts War of The
Worlds and Oblivion. The only odd thing about this home video
release is that it's one of the first times I've ever seen a studio
basically change/modify the title of the film for the Blu-ray. In
theaters the film was simply known as Edge
of Tomorrow
but now its being referred to as Live
Die Repeat: Edge of Tomorrow
- either way this movie I feel is going to only grow appreciation
over time and is really an impressive accomplishment. It found a
wider audience in a foreign market than it did in America but
hopefully that will change now with this exciting home video release.
Minor
Spoilers ahead:
The
film takes place in the near future, where an alien race known as the
Mimics have invaded the Earth and defeated the world's military
units. It follows Major William Cage (Cruise), a military PR officer
inexperienced in combat, who is deployed into a combat mission
against the aliens unwillingly after he blackmails General Brighman
(Brendan Gleeson) with the threat of exposing him through public
relations. Waking up in handcuffs at a military operating center
named Heathrow (the famed airport converted?), Cage discovers he has
been labeled a deserter and put on combat duty for the invasion under
the command of Master Sergeant Farell (Bill Paxton).
Though
Cage is killed in minutes on the trenches of combat, he finds himself
starting over in a time loop after killing a large Mimic and getting
sprayed by its acid-like blood. He suddenly begins repeating the
same mission and being killed each time, but soon Cage learns to
better fight the aliens, and he teams up with Special Forces warrior
Rita Vrataski (Blunt) who recognizes his ability to anticipate events
and tells him to locate her the next time he wakes up.
Cage
finds Vrataski at Heathrow and together they meet up with Dr. Carter
(Noah Taylor), a former government scientist and expert in Mimic
biology. Cage learns that the kind of Mimic he killed in his first
loop, an Alpha, resets time when it is killed to give the Mimics an
advantage in battle. Cage inherited this ability when he was doused
in the Alpha's blood as they both died. Vrataski had this ability in
a previous battle but lost it after receiving a blood transfusion.
She tells Cage that they must hunt the Mimics' hive mind, the Omega,
and hit the enemy at its source. Only project is that the only way
to see the Omega is by inheriting visions of its current whereabouts
by way of repeated death. From here, the film gets even more intense
as the search for the Omega turns Cage into a hardened badass with
the ability to know what's coming next.
I
won't ruin the end of the film for you but I will say that you will
not be disappointed!
The
image transfer and sound on this disc are really breath taking.
Warner has really done a great job with all of the details on the
digital effects that really sell its realism. Presented in 1080p
high definition and the widescreen aspect ratio is preserved at
2.40:1 from the original aspect ratio of 2.39:1. The Audio is
glorious with a sharp lossless English DTS-HD Master Audio (MA) 7.1
track with additional options of French, Spanish, and Portuguese
Dolby Digital 5.1 tracks. Subtitles on the disc are in English SDH,
French, Spanish, and Portuguese. Total Running Time for the film
clocks in around 113 minutes. The set includes a Blu-ray disc, DVD
that's at a high quality for the format (with a lossy Dolby Digital
track that doesn't come close to the DTS), and an Ultra Violet
Digital copy.
There
are three different editions of the film coming out for the American
market: the 3 Disc (3D and 2D Blu and DVD set), a 3 disc Target
Exclusive Steelbook, and a 1- disc Best Buy exclusive (BD only)
version.
Special
features on the disc are pretty awesome and include:
Operation
Downfall
Adrenaline
Cut
Storming
The Beach
Weapons
Of The Future
Creatures
Not Of This World
On
The Edge With Director Doug Liman
Deleted
Scenes
In
this humble Sci-Fi fan's opinion, Live
Die Repeat:
Edge
of Tomorrow
is a repeat watch for sure. A huge accomplishment in directing and
digital effects and is on the same level with many classics in the
genre James Cameron or Steven Spielberg could have easily made this
film, by that I mean it is that quality standard of Sci-fi outing. A
highly recommended release from Warner, I'm very happy to have this
film in my collection with this edition that captures the excitement
and presentation on Blu-ray disc to as high of a standard as one
could ask for the format.
-
James Harland Lockhart V
https://www.facebook.com/jamesharlandlockhartv