8.1 | / 10 |
Users | 4.5 | |
Reviewer | 3.5 | |
Overall | 3.8 |
Batman has not been seen for ten years. A new breed of criminal ravages Gotham City, forcing fifty-five-year-old Bruce Wayne back into the cape and cowl, but does he still have what it takes to fight crime in a new era?
Starring: Peter Weller, Michael Emerson, Ariel Winter, Michael McKean, Wade Williams (II)Comic book | 100% |
Action | 99% |
Sci-Fi | 75% |
Adventure | 71% |
Animation | 57% |
Crime | 14% |
Film-Noir | 10% |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.78:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
French: Dolby Digital 5.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
German: Dolby Digital 5.1
English SDH, French, German SDH, Japanese, Spanish
25GB Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
UV digital copy
DVD copy
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 4.0 | |
Video | 4.0 | |
Audio | 4.0 | |
Extras | 2.0 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
Successfully adapting Frank Miller's seminal 1986 limited series, "Batman: The Dark Knight Returns," would be a monumental challenge and undertaking for anyone, Christopher Nolan included, and it's long been considered unfilmable. (Alan Moore's Watchmen being another, not that Zack Snyder didn't prove just how filmable a fairly faithful adaptation really could be.) Executive producer Bruce Timm and his team apparently don't scare so easily. For Warner Bros. Animation's fifteenth and sixteenth DC Universe animated original movies, Timm and his fellow producers have decided to finally give comic fans the adaptation they've spent more than twenty-five years begging for. Having watched Part 1, though, I can't help but wonder if Miller's opus should have been divided into three animated features. Much of "The Dark Knight Returns" and "The Dark Knight Triumphant," the first two issues of the larger "Dark Knight Returns" limited series, has been preserved. Honored even. But some of it has been muted or shoved aside too, making for two distinct viewing experiences: one for those who consider Miller's original 4-issue story a masterwork among the greatest comicbooks, and another for those who've never cracked its pages. For fans of Miller's groundbreaking take on the Batman mythos, The Dark Knight Returns, Part 1 will be a bittersweet step toward the live-action adaptation we all know could work so well given the right screenwriter and director. For those who've never picked up the book, Part 1 will be much more satisfying, and perhaps even convince those same filmfans to finally pick up one of the most influential, skillfully crafted Batman tales of all time.
Typical of a DCU animated feature high definition presentation, The Dark Knight Returns, Part 1 is striking but flawed. Its flaws, though -- faint artifacting, slight to moderate banding, and hints of aliasing -- seem to trace back to the original animation, not Warner's 1080p/AVC-encoded efforts. Thankfully, the artifacting is only noticeable on occasion (and even then, only if you're scrutinizing the picture); the banding isn't all that distracting, and when it is (during the first fight between Batman and the Mutant leader) it tends to involve static horizontal lines inherent to the background image; and what little aliasing there is only makes a nuisance of itself here and there (the worst of which appears in a pan of the red-visored mutants). Otherwise, there isn't much to complain about. Colors are as bleak, grim or vivid as needed, primaries pop, black levels are inky and contrast, while oppressively dark by design, is satisfying and consistent, even as night falls or shadows close in. Detail is terrific too, with every nuance of the movie's hand-drawn animation and CG elements reproduced to perfection. As far as the encode is concerned, there isn't much to worry over either. Fans of Warner's DCU Blu-ray releases won't be surprised by anything here. The good, the bad or the ugly. Fortunately, the good is pretty great, the bad isn't all that bad, and the ugly is tough to spot.
Warner's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround track is true to Part 1's sound design. That sound design just isn't the all-out sonic assault it could -- I'd argue should -- be. Rear speaker activity is my biggest qualm. Even when Batman is rolling into the Mutant basecamp in a souped up Batmo... tank, firing to his heart's content, there isn't much in the way of rear speaker aggression, directional depth or soundfield immersion. It isn't underwhelming per se (it's still reasonably loud and rowdy), but it doesn't match the intensity of the events unfolding on screen or the prowess that might come with a live-action adaptation. Nor is it the only scene that sounds a bit too front-heavy. That said, everything else comes through nicely. The LFE channel hits hard and doesn't let up, throwing its weight behind every meaty punch, cannon blast, explosion and general unruliness the movie has to offer. Dynamics are decidedly effective too, as are channel pans, the integration and prioritization of Christopher Drake's music, and other elements that up Part 1's cinematic quotient. Dialogue is clean, clear and exacting as well, rounding out a solid but not entirely enveloping lossless audio experience.
"The Dark Knight Returns" may be one of the most important and influential comicbook limited series of all time, and its adaptations may combine to make one of the most hotly anticipated DC Universe animated features to date, but that simply isn't reflected in Part 1's supplemental package. While Carrie is put under the microscope (for a whopping twelve minutes), the rest of Frank Miller's masterwork and director Jay Oliva and writer Bob Goodman's movie go unexplored. "The Bob Kane" story is a welcome (albeit relatively unrelated) addition, sure, and the Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 sneak peek suggests the second half will be an exciting one, I'll admit. But you'd think there'd be more here. A lot more.
Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 1 isn't quite all that it could be and, in a few seemingly small but arguably fundamental ways, alters Frank Miller's original four-issue comic more than is necessary. But there's a lot to love in the first part of Warner Premiere's "Dark Knight Returns" adaptation and even more to suggest Part 2 will be even better. Diehard fans of the 1986 limited series will declare Part 1 a bittersweet success, casual fans will find the movie more than satisfactory, and newcomers will enjoy it far more than the other two camps. Warner holds up its end of the bargain too. Its Blu-ray release doesn't disappoint, at least as far as its strong AV presentation is concerned. The only major letdown is the disc's fairly anemic supplemental package. All that said, there's no reason to hedge your bets with a rental. Even those expecting more than the movie delivers won't regret a purchase.
with Figurine
2012
2012
2012
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #16
2013
10th Anniversary | Commemorative Edition
2011
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #9
2010
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #8
2010
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #23
2015
DCU
2014
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #6
2009
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #3
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DC Universe Animated Original Movie #13
2012
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #11
2011
Deluxe Edition | DC Universe Animated Original Movie #15 & 16 | Seamless Cut + Frank Miller Documentary
2012-2013
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #18
2013
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #25
2016
2009
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #14
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2014
DC Universe Animated Original Movie #7
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DC Universe Animated Original Movie #30
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DC Universe Animated Original Movie #17
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