7.7 | / 10 |
Users | 4.4 | |
Reviewer | 4.0 | |
Overall | 4.0 |
A country-rock music star helps a young singer find fame, even as age and alcoholism send his own career into a downward spiral. An update of the classic rise and fall fable about the perils of hitting the big time in show business.
Starring: Lady Gaga, Bradley Cooper, Sam Elliott, Andrew Dice Clay, Rafi GavronMusic | 100% |
Romance | 23% |
Drama | Insignificant |
Video codec: HEVC / H.265
Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
Aspect ratio: 2.40:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: Dolby Atmos
English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 16-bit)
French (Canada): Dolby Digital 5.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
Hungarian: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
Russian: Dolby Digital 5.1
English: Dolby Digital 2.0 (448 kbps)
English DD=narrative descriptive
English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Cantonese, Croatian, Greek, Hungarian, Korean, Mandarin (Simplified), Mandarin (Traditional), Romanian, Russian, Thai, Turkish
Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (2 BDs)
Digital copy
4K Ultra HD
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 4.5 | |
Video | 4.0 | |
Audio | 5.0 | |
Extras | 2.5 | |
Overall | 4.0 |
A Star Is Born takes the title and tale of the beloved 1954 Judy Garland/James Mason classic of the same name (as well as two other adaptations), but not its temperament or timeframe. This is a contemporary reimagining where external success is measured in YouTube views and Grammy awards but life success at a much more intimate level. It's a gruff, raw, and real picture helmed by leading man Bradley Cooper in his directorial debut. Cooper's vision for the film balances romantic intimacies and personal crises with sprawling musical numbers and industry excitement, and fatigue. The film thrives on organic, complex characters who meet through chance, fall in love, and see their careers take radically different directions; one is on the rise and the other is on decline, though there's obviously much more to their stations than how many fans they draw or which awards they win. Though the film is more than reliant on broad-stroke narrative cliché, it's in the intimate character beats that the film finds the voice that would find it nominated for eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture and a trio of Actor nods.
The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc. Watch for 4K screenshots at a later date.
A Star Is Born's upscaled 2160p/Dolby Vision UHD release does more than tinker
around the edges and does less than transform the movie's visual infrastructure. Best said, this is a solid texture and color increase over the Blu-ray, which is very good within the somewhat airy, diffuse parameters the
filmmakers have utilized to make the movie. The Dolby Vision color enhancement adds some critical color depth and contrast to the image, most
obviously in well-lit scenes. Take a scene inside a grocery store at the 20-minute mark. The bright, intense lighting and colorful surroundings offer a
perfect opportunity to explore the improvements DV makes on the film, including the boost to contrast that does not remove that airy, light feeling but
does find colors in a more harmonious balance that yields greater depth without robbing the scene of the essential visual impact. Such holds true even
away from the most radically intense lighting in the movie. From darker backstage areas to modestly lit home interiors, the Dolby Vision color grading
offers a tonal shift that improves essential contrast and depth without fundamentally altering the picture's intended appearance, offering a
solidification, not a transformation, of the movie's color scheme. Dolby Vision further improves upon black levels, shadow detail, and general lower light
scenes, offering a more robust black spectrum that amplifies the impact of a number of key scenes without, again, straying from filmmaker vision.
Contrarily, bright light sources are more naturally brilliant and white attire and accents enjoy greater clarity and intensity.
There is also a pleasing add to sharpness and clarity, which falls somewhere between incremental and fairly impressive. There's more tactile definition,
greater image stability, and more intimate texturing over the Blu-ray. Skin details, hair, and clothes notably enjoy amplified definition on the UHD
format, presenting with a more natural, effortless sharpness that in some cases leaves the Blu-ray appearing a bit soft and flat by comparison. This is a
release that makes a good case for the benefits of even an upscaled image. It's certainly not the best looking movie by most any standard, nor is it the
best
looking UHD, but even with a color palette that merely solidifies the film's color scheme and only incremental adds to sharpness, the UHD proves its
worth by enhancing the overall viewing experience and creating the current definitive home video version of the film.
A Star Is Born belts out a prodigious Dolby Atmos soundtrack. The presentation struts its stuff right out of the gate with a thunderous, perfectly immersive concert scene with a pronounced low end support that harmoniously balances with richly detailed and stage-filling instrumentals and crowd noise. It's a dynamic sonic stretch -- full-bodied, relentlessly detailed, and invigorating -- that is matched several times throughout the film. The overhead channels do not offer anything of discrete note in these scenes, or elsewhere in the film, but they do add a rather obvious sense of greater spacial immersion that transplants the listener onto the stage, critical to aurally matching the intimate filming of those key on-stage scenes (and it's no wonder Jack suffers from an acute case of tinnitus). The rest of the track offers nothing above and beyond but does deliver a full, healthy listening experience wether recreating essential barroom din or location environmental sounds, reverb during a pre-concert session around the 30-minute mark, or score. The Atmos presentation offers all components in agreeable working order, never failing to distinguish hard-edged guitar riffs or low-end Pop beats with equal clarity and accuracy. Dialogue delivery is faithful to a front-center position, yielding seamless spoken word detail and effortless prioritization.
Of the supplements included on the Blu-ray, only one carries over to the UHD: Musical Moments (2160p/Dolby Vision) which are just a
collection of musical clips from the film. Everything else can be found on the bundled Blu-ray (outlined below). This release ships with a Movies
Anywhere digital copy code and a non-embossed slipcover.
In A Star Is Born, first-time Director Bradley Cooper takes genre cliché character cornerstones, including identity crises, alcoholism, and the journey from talented nobody into overnight sensation, and crafts a picture of resplendent character intimacy. It's a great challenge that Cooper conquers with confidence both behind the camera and in front of it. His co-star, Pop sensation Lady Gaga, delivers a grounded, touching performance as a character who finds sudden fame and fortune but also the love of her life. Hers is an uphill battle to find balance in both, and Gaga delivers a complex, layered performance that shines from her first to her final scene. Warner's UHD release of A Star Is Born delivers rock-solid video, a terrific Atmos soundtrack, and several extras. Very highly recommended.
w/ Soundtrack
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Special Encore Edition
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