Rating summary
| Movie |  | 3.0 |
| Video |  | 5.0 |
| Audio |  | 5.0 |
| Extras |  | 4.5 |
| Overall |  | 4.0 |
Dead Man 4K Blu-ray Movie Review
Reviewed by Dr. Svet Atanasov February 23, 2026
Jim Jarmusch's "Dead Man" (1995) arrives on 4K Blu-ray courtesy of Criterion. The supplemental features on the release include archival Q&A sessions with the director; archival audio commentary by sound mixer Drew Kunin and production designer Bob Ziembicki; deleted scenes; and more. In English, with optional English SDH subtitles for the main feature. Region-Free.

"The only job you're gonna get in here is pushing up daisies from a pine box. Now get out."
The Wild West as imagined by American auteur Jim Jarmusch has plenty in common with the place that the famous duo Bud Spencer and Terence Hill visited multiple times over the years. It is one massive playground for adults where various goofy characters risk their lives and die in some truly awkward ways.
In Jarmusch’s
Dead Man, Johnny Depp plays a young accountant from Cleveland named William Blake who is heading west to start a new life. He knows his final destination, a small mining town, and his future employer, the wealthy man that owns the only mine in the area, but not the exact nature of the job that he has been hired to do. All he has is a letter confirming his appointment, with a proper description of the mine’s location.
Shortly after he arrives in town, Blake meets his employer, John Dickinson (Robert Mitchum), but he turns out to be an aging loon in love with his rifle who instantly declares that he no longer needs his services because he is late and there is already a different accountant working on his books. The stunned Blake attempts to change his mind, but quickly realizes that the loon would not think twice about using his beloved rifle in his office. Later that night, Blake ends up in the town’s popular saloon, where fate unites him with a reformed whore who now sells flowers to make ends meet. He visits her place and shares her bed, but when her ex-lover appears, a lot goes wrong very quickly, and he barely escapes with a bullet in his chest.
Bleeding and partially unconscious, Blake hides in the nearby forest, where he is lucky to be saved by a strange Indian warrior named Nobody (Gary Farmer) who might have spent too much time using the great peace pipe of his tribe. Meanwhile, after Dickinson is informed that the cold body of his son was discovered at the whore’s place, he hires a trio of kooky headhunters to track down Blake and bring him back to him -- preferably with a big gaping hole in his forehead.
The film has such a dry and elusive sense of humor that at times it looks like it is actually deadly serious about defining the nature of human existence while peeking through the same prism that its strange characters use to view the world around them and rationalize their actions. Or maybe this is precisely what the film sets out to accomplish, and occasionally Jarmusch simply hits the brakes to let the brain cool off a bit and process all of the information that has been dispatched to it.
So, which is it?
The truth is that the film does a little bit of both. There is a part of it that aspires to be funny in a traditional Jarmusch-esque way and this is where all the quality quirky material emerges. (A good example is the entire subplot that involves the loony mine owner and the headhunters that are hired to get Blake). But it also promotes some quite unorthodox yet serious observations about the different ways in which human beings come to terms with their mortality and in the process begin to appreciate the world they live in. Blake’s unusual experiences after he arrives in the mining town are what initiates the bulk of these observations.
The end product is a very, very fluid film that is anything but easy to embrace. Most of the time, it just feels like Jarmusch plays with massive concepts and ideas that casually drift away as soon as it begins to look like they would require serious analysis to either definitively endorse or dismiss. For a short period of time the lack of clarity proves to be a good thing as it becomes intellectually stimulating, but after that only Roby Muller’s brilliant cinematography and Neil Young’s improvised score prevent the film from evolving into a total snooze-fest.
Dead Man 4K Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality 

Criterion release of Dead Man is a 4K Blu-ray/Blu-ray combo pack. The 4K Blu-ray is Region-Free. However, the Blu-ray is Region-A "locked".
Please note that some of the screencaptures included with this article are taken from the 4K Blu-ray and downscaled to 1080p. Therefore, they do not accurately reflect the quality of the 4K content on the 4K Blu-ray disc.
Screencaptures #1-15 are taken from the Blu-ray.
Screencaptures #17-25 are taken from the 4K Blu-ray.
The 4K restoration presented on the 4K Blu-ray included in this combo pack was introduced on Blu-ray in 2018. In native 4K, the 4K restoration cannot be viewed with Dolby Vision or HDR grades.
On my system, it was very difficult to see any substantial improvements in quality after the upgrade to 4K Blu-ray. Delineation, clarity, sharpness, and depth are outstanding, but they are also mighty impressive in 1080p on the Blu-ray. During close-ups, I believe that sharpness is now marginally better, but this is what I would call a minor cosmetic improvement, and I am unsure if it is something most people would even notice. The grayscale is terrific, but it replicates qualities -- like wonderfully saturated blacks and grays, and excellent balance of all blacks, grays, and whites -- that were already present on the 1080p presentation. The density levels of the native 4K and 1080p visuals are identical as well. So, should you consider acquiring the combo pack release? If you do not have the previous Blu-ray release and like Dead Man, yes, absolutely. But if you already have the previous Blu-ray release in your library, you should probably try to test the 4K Blu-ray release to see if it brings any meaningful improvements to your 4K system before committing to a purchase.
Dead Man 4K Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality 

There is only one standard audio track on this release: English DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0. Optional English SDH subtitles are provided for the main feature.
While revisiting Dead Man on 4K Blu-ray, I did not notice any encoding anomalies. Because the lossless track is the same that was included on the original Blu-ray release of Dead Man, I am reposting my previous comments on it.
The lossless track is quite aggressive and with an oomph that will probably surprise some viewers that have not revisited the film in a long time. Rather predictably, the dialog is also very clear and free of balance issues. Also, Neil Young's score easily shines and adds to the peculiar atmosphere. There are no audio dropouts or distortions to report in our review.
Dead Man 4K Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras 

4K BLU-RAY DISC
- Commentary - in this archival selected-scene commentary, sound mixer Drew Kunin and production designer Bob Ziembicki discusses some of the locations that were chosen for different sequences; some particular stylistic choices; the film's unusual blending of humor, violence, and the metaphysical; the image of the west that is promoted in the film, etc. The commentary was recorded exclusively for Criterion in 2017.
1. Shaking the train
2. Purveyors of bones and hides
3. Mud that looks like mud
4. Marit's designs
5. Horses and boom microphones
6. Aspen forest
7. Nobody gets you
8. Violence
9. Arizona lava fields
10. Off-camera shooting
11. "Grass Pants, Oregon'
12. "We sure don't"
13. The Makah village
BLU-RAY DISC
- Commentary - in this archival selected-scene commentary, sound mixer Drew Kunin and production designer Bob Ziembicki discusses some of the locations that were chosen for different sequences; some particular stylistic choices; the film's unusual blending of humor, violence, and the metaphysical; the image of the west that is promoted in the film, etc. The commentary was recorded exclusively for Criterion in 2017.
1. Shaking the train
2. Purveyors of bones and hides
3. Mud that looks like mud
4. Marit's designs
5. Horses and boom microphones
6. Aspen forest
7. Nobody gets you
8. Violence
9. Arizona lava fields
10. Off-camera shooting
11. "Grass Pants, Oregon'
12. "We sure don't"
13. The Makah village
- Q&A with Jim - in this archival program, Jim Jarmusch answers a series of questions gathered after Criterion invited fans to submit them in 2017. In English, not subtitled. (48 min).
1. Introduction
2. Peyote
3. Subverting the Old West
4. Robby Muller
5. Neil Young and Iggy Pop
6. "As a dilettante..."
7. How many bullets?
8. Casting
9. "Can I be in one of your movies?"
10. Character actors
11. Earth, Wind & Fire
12. Who would make a good western?
13. The cut worm
14. Summit Mall
15. Miramax
16. Beekeepers
17. The Makah Village
18. Nobody's character
19. Mitchum
20. Calypso
21. Space
22. Bad Reviews
23. What is it about
24. The score
25. Dolemite
26. William Blake
27. The Ornery Mitchum Boys
28. Pumpkin ravioli
29. "Music in your films"
30. Cheer up
31. A final questions
- Gary Farmer - in this archival program, actor Gary Farmer (Nobody) recalls his first meeting with Jim Jarmusch and discusses his contribution to Dead Man. The program was produced in 2017. In English, not subtitled. (27 min).
- Reading Blake - presented here are audio recordings from 2017 and 2018 of actors Mili Avital reading from "Auguries of Innocence", Alfred Molina reading from "The Everlasting Gospel", and Iggy Pop reading from "Proverbs of Hell". They play over location scouting photos taken by Jim Jarmusch in California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, Idaho, Wyoming, and Washington to show the look of the film to potential investors. In English, not subtitled. (8 min).
- Deleted Scenes - a large collection of deleted scenes. In English, not subtitled. (15 min).
- Neil Young - presented here is raw footage from a recording session, during which Neil Young is seen performing material that will eventually be used in the soundtrack for Dead Man. The footage was shot by Jim Jarmusch. In English, not subtitled. (26 min).
- Music Video - presented here is a music video for a song from the film. The video can be seen with a recording of Johnny Depp reading a poem by William Blake. (4 min, 1080/60i).
- Blake and White in Color - presented here is a large collection of vintage color photos from the film's production. (1080p).
- Trailer - original Miramax Films trailer for Dead Man. In English, not subtitled. (3 min, 1080p).
- Booklet - a 22-page illustrated booklet featuring critic Amy Taubin's essay "Blake in America", author Ben Ratliff's essay "Earth, Wind, and Fire", and technical credits.
Dead Man 4K Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation 

Perhaps this is what it feels like while being under the influence of peyote -- you unleash the true power of your mind and have experiences that temporarily convince you that you can see life from an entirely new angle, and then grasp the true nature of your existence; or you just get sent on a whacky trip that ends abruptly with an awful headache. I don't know and do not plan to find out, but I am pretty sure Jim Jarmusch was thinking along those lines when he conceived Dead Man. It is an interesting concept for a film, but the end result is just too fluid to take seriously or enjoy as an off-beat comedy.
Criterion's combo pack brings a native 4K presentation of the excellent 4K restoration of Dead Man that was introduced with this Blu-ray release in 2018. I still think that the 4K restoration looks incredible on Blu-ray, and I do not think that its transition to 4K Blu-ray is a substantial upgrade in quality. My advice is to find a way to test the 4K Blu-ray first and see whether it gives a better presentation of the film on your 4K system, and only then commit to a purchase.