7.8 | / 10 |
Users | 5.0 | |
Reviewer | 3.0 | |
Overall | 3.7 |
Yorkshire, during the endless, violent 1984 strike against the Thatcher closure of British coal mines. Widower Jackie Elliot and his firstborn, fellow miner Tony, take a dim view of 11 year-old second son Billy's poor record in boxing class, which worsens when they discover he sneakily transferred to the neighboring, otherwise girls-only-attended ballet class. Only one schoolmate, closet-gay Michael Caffrey, encourages Billy's desire, aroused by the teacher, who judged him talented enough for private lesson, to train and try out for the world-renowned Royal Ballet audition. Only the prospect of a fancy career unimagined in the pauper quarter may twist pa and big brother's opposition to indispensable support.
Starring: Julie Walters, Gary Lewis (III), Jamie Draven, Jamie Bell, Jean HeywoodMusic | 100% |
Coming of age | 82% |
Drama | Insignificant |
Comedy | Insignificant |
Video codec: VC-1
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
French: DTS 5.1
Spanish: DTS 5.1
English SDH, French, Spanish
50GB Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
Digital copy (as download)
DVD copy
BD-Live
Mobile features
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 4.0 | |
Video | 3.0 | |
Audio | 4.0 | |
Extras | 1.5 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
If you've never had the desire to sit down and give Billy Elliot a fair shot, chances are it's because you've pegged director Stephen Daldry's Oscar-nominated drama as a feel-good tearjerker about a young boy who dreams of being a dancer. But if you've been avoiding dear Billy these past twelve years based on little more than a vague plot summary, theatrical trailer, movie poster or snap judgment, you should seriously consider jettisoning your preconceived notions and giving the 2000 Academy Awards contender the benefit of the doubt. Billy Elliot isn't a feel-good tearjerker about a young boy who dreams of being a dancer. That would be selling the film short, to say nothing of its award-worthy performances, screenwriter Lee Hall's wry slice-of-period-life script, its moving coming-of-age story, and its unexpected tone and R-rated tenor. No, the little dark horse that (almost) could is actually much, much more; much funnier, much darker, much more compelling, and much more poignant. Sadly, though, it's been undersold, undervalued and underrated from day one.
"All right for your Nana. For girls. Not for lads, Billy. Lads do football. Or boxing. Or wrestling. Not ballet."
I dream of a world with no edge enhancement. No DNR. A world free of edge halos and smearing. A world where a Billy Elliot release earns top marks for its video quality. Alas, that world isn't here just yet. The halos and blasé fine textures that haunt Universal's 1080p/VC-1 encoded presentation aren't among the most distracting I've seen, but they do beg the question: why did the film need tweaked at all? Are we dealing with an old DVD-era master, as I suspect? Or a heavy-handed remaster? Everything looks fairly good, from Brian Tufano's economically strained palette to the actors' wonderfully saturated skintones to the understated storminess that graces many scenes. While Universal had been making some small strides (baby steps, really) toward minting better catalog transfers, this one falls squarely in the middle of the studio's best and worst. Grain has been largely eliminated (along with many a texture), clarity is serviceable (and little more), and definition is, on the whole, less than spectacular (even if those with small to medium-sized screens will wonder what I'm grumbling about). On a positive note, colors are as chilly or toasty as they're meant to be, contrast is consistent and consistently satisfying, black levels are nice and earthy, and delineation is decent. It helps that the presentation is as proficient as it is, without any signs of compression mishaps or encoding difficulties Ultimately, though, persistent edge halos and overzealous noise reduction hold this one back from greatness. No one should avoid Billy Elliot's Blu debut for fear of sitting through an unwatchable video presentation (it nudges past its DVD counterpart, after all), but don't get too excited until you've seen it. It could look much better.
Billy Elliot's stirring DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround track steadies itself, darts across the soundstage and leaps with joyous enthusiasm... most of the time. Alas, there are a handful scenes, few and far between as they may be, that are front-heavy, thin and a wee bit stodgy, not that anyone but the most stringent audiophiles will complain. Dialogue is clean, bright and nestled snuggly within the struggling, soot-stained shanty that is Stephen Daldry's mining town. LFE output is hearty and assertive -- particularly when Billy plays his brother's records or hears music welling up inside of him -- and muffled footfalls, meaty punches, violent picket line encounters, and other low-end effects are given proper support. The use of the rear speakers is commendable as well, as rowdy crowds, tiny dancers, angry coal miners and street noise struts its stuff. And it doesn't stop there. Directionality is fairly accurate convincing, dynamics sing and soar, and pans are, by and large, graceful (even if a small number are a tad sluggish). If the flurry of strings and horns that embrace Billy's parting Swan Lake performance don't send shivers down your spine, well then, you don't have much of a spine. Ultimately, Billy Elliot's lossless mix exhibits real prowess, which isn't entirely common when dealing with twelve-year-old catalog titles.
Billy Elliot: Breaking Free (SD, 23 minutes) is the only extra of note, but it's a solid one, offering a deeper overview of the production than its chummy narrator and EPK trappings might initially suggest. Director Stephen Daldry is present and accounted for (as are other key members of the cast and crew) and little is left to the imagination. A standard definition theatrical trailer is included as well.
Perhaps of some interest is the fact that the Blu-ray edition of Billy Elliot doesn't have a "Top Menu." A pop-up menu is available (with a "Pause" option and a Universal BD-Live news ticker), but the film simply loops back to the beginning when it reaches the end of the credits. Pressing the "Top Menu" button on your remote does nothing, other than confuse your Blu-ray player for a second. This is, as far as I know, the first Universal release formatted in this fashion.
Billy Elliot, God help me for saying it, danced its way into my heart. I laughed, I cried, I did all the god-awful things typically associated with generic film-critic quotes. But Stephen Daldry's R-rated, Oscar-nominated coming-of-age jig isn't at all what I expected, and I suspect it won't be what most newcomers expect either. Funnier, darker, more sobering and more poignant than your average puppet-strings tear-jerker, its portrayal of a struggling family, an out-of-work widower and a bright-eyed boy who dares to dream a dancer's dream is quite the moving movie. The fact that Erin Brockovich was nominated for Best Picture over Billy Elliot still rubs me the wrong way. Ah well. Universal's Blu-ray release is worth the cost of admission, despite a so-so video presentation and a single extra. This is a film that, despite whatever you may think going in, deserves an audition in your home theater. Give it a shot and see just how difficult it is to resist its charms.
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