Colossal Blu-ray Movie

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Colossal Blu-ray Movie United States

Blu-ray + DVD + UV Digital Copy
Universal Studios | 2016 | 109 min | Rated R | Aug 01, 2017

Colossal (Blu-ray Movie)

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List price: $22.98
Third party: $14.33 (Save 38%)
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Buy Colossal on Blu-ray Movie

Movie rating

6.9
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users4.0 of 54.0
Reviewer3.5 of 53.5
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Overview

Colossal (2016)

A woman discovers that severe catastrophic events are somehow connected to the mental breakdown from which she's suffering.

Starring: Anne Hathaway, Jason Sudeikis, Austin Stowell, Tim Blake Nelson, Dan Stevens
Director: Nacho Vigalondo

DramaInsignificant
ComedyInsignificant
ActionInsignificant

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
    Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1

  • Subtitles

    English SDH, French, Spanish

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
    UV digital copy
    DVD copy

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region A, B (C untested)

Review

Rating summary

Movie4.5 of 54.5
Video4.5 of 54.5
Audio4.5 of 54.5
Extras0.5 of 50.5
Overall3.5 of 53.5

Colossal Blu-ray Movie Review

Metaphorical Monsters.

Reviewed by Martin Liebman July 29, 2017

What happens when Godzilla meets psychological scars and a little bit of fluke electricity? A movie just like Colossal. Director Nacho Vigalondo's (Open Windows) film about a pair of emotionally bruised and figuratively lost individuals is a metaphorical mash-up that's part monster movie and part gloomy character drama sprinkled with some dark humor for effect. It's a unique, thought-proving, and entertaining film, a standout in a cinema landscape that rarely brings those three qualities together, often sacrificing two for the sake of the third. Colossal has them in near-perfect balance. The movie is a rare treat in a world of big budget bombs and cookie cutter cinema.

What happens here doesn't stay here.


Tim (Dan Stevens) has had it with Gloria (Anne Hathaway), his perpetually drunken and absentee girlfriend. He kicks her out of his New York apartment, leaving her with nowhere to go but to her old, quasi-abandoned childhood small-town home. No sooner does she arrive, she bumps into Oscar (Jason Sudeikis), a childhood friend who has taken over running a family-owned bar after his father's death. He offers her a job at the bar and helps her settle into the house with the occasional delivery of household essentials, like a television and a futon. Her return home coincides with a monster attack in Seoul, South Korea. The monster has attacked before, but it's been more than two decades since the last, ironically when Gloria still lived in town as a child. The monster appears, destroys, and disappears. It doesn't take long for Gloria to realize that she's somehow in control of the monster, that it appears only when she visits a particular spot -- a playground -- that's obviously a key to both the supernatural occurrences in Seoul and a secret connection between Gloria and the spot in question.

Colossal is very different, but it's also very good, together making for one of the year's best films. The film overflows with metaphorical points of interest, obvious ones but ones folded organically and smartly into the narrative. Battling inner demons, facing one's own giants, staring down the consequences of one's actions, taking responsibility, dealing with power, and understanding the dangers of detachment are all interwoven into the narrative. The film is a core psychological study, then, but one that, despite being a hair overlong and plodding in a few places, delivers a fantastic glimpse into the human psyche, how two lost individuals struggle with newfound realizations and how they allow their life directions to influence the world around them. That the consequences are so distant is the perfect compliment to the story, where one can often be blinded to the consequences of their actions. It's in how the characters respond and the courses of action -- physical and more importantly, emotional -- develop that give the story shape and meaning and offer a telling, and sometimes sobering, look at the human condition through a monstrous prism, one that can be both literal and figurative at the same time.

The film takes these complex issues and juxtapositions and makes them accessible and explorable. It's not above its audience and it's not below its audience. It engages the viewer with a story that's both relatable and entertaining. It has its fun with the narrative details but quickly engages into the darker sectors of the mind as the character qualities become more pronounced as the truth of what's happening becomes more clear. Nacho Vigalondo, who also wrote the film, finds a continuos harmony throughout, exploring the human condition with a keen insight into the best and worst of the characters and much of what lies in-between, all intermixed with a fun story of monster mayhem that generates nearly as many laughs as it fires neurons in the brain.

The cast makes the movie. Beyond the plot points, the monster mayhem, the light humor, and the scripted characterizations, the actors bring the movie to life with the depth and breadth the script demands. To a player, the cast finds the character centers and, by extension, the film's center, too, exploring the individual characteristics with involved determination that opens the narrative beyond its plot points. Sudeikis is the big winner, portraying the lost, drunken, and angry Oscar who evolves with the story and has his own big secret to share with the characters, and the audience, as the film moves along. While the character isn't particularly creative, there's no shortage of plot-complimentary depth. Sudeikis plays it very well, bringing life to a troubled character, as does Hathaway her own, who is more of a transitional key figure in the story. Both understand the complexities the story presents them, and even if their underlying life stories aren't particularly engaging, it's what the film does with them that makes it a winner.


Colossal Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  4.5 of 5

Colossal's digital source shoot transitions well to Blu-ray. A few scenes reveal some smudgy edges and noise can be a regular occurrence, even in some better-lit scenes, but overall there's little room for major complaint. Details are firm and accurate, showcasing intricate facial features -- pores, hair, makeup, bruises -- with effortless ease and clarity. Environments, whether a low-light bar, a moderately lit home, or dark Seoul streets showcase pinpoint definition on every surface. Colors favor a pleasantly neutral shading. There's no serious push to overcook them, no desaturation, just a well balanced appearance that compliments the movie nicely. Black levels -- nighttime exteriors, shadowy interiors -- hold firm. Skin tones appear accurate. This is a solid new release transfer from Universal.


Colossal Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  4.5 of 5

Colossal features a solidly performing DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack. The presentation satisfies the movie's requirements for impressive depth as necessary, delivering a good bit of low end thump and mayhem in the monster attack sequences, with a corresponding din of frightened civilians, blaring alarms, and widely spaced music all surrounding the listener. Music plays with sufficient front end width and clarity, nothing special but there's good separation and detail to instrumentals. Fireworks zip and pop and explode with impressive spacing and movement at the 80-minute mark. Light atmospherics fill in some gaps in various locations, such as inside Oscar's bar, with satisfying spacing and stage positioning. Dialogue is clear and detailed with front-center placement and prioritization.


Colossal Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  0.5 of 5

Colossal's only supplement is a deleted scene (1080p, 4:16). A DVD copy of the film and a voucher for a UV/iTunes digital copy are included with purchase.


Colossal Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  3.5 of 5

Colossal is a fantastic film that's engaging from strange start to revelatory middle to satisfying end. It's wonderfully unique, deeply metaphorical, strongly acted, and finely directed, certainly one of the year's best films. Universal's Blu-ray is disappointingly devoid of extras (much like another wonderful film, Sleight, which releases on the same day) beyond a single deleted scene. Video and audio are just fine. Very highly recommended.