7.1 | / 10 |
Users | 4.2 | |
Reviewer | 3.5 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
Four decades after escaping his Halloween night murder spree, a haunted Laurie Strode comes face to face once more with the masked psychopath Michael Myers.
Starring: Jamie Lee Curtis, Judy Greer, Andi Matichak, Will Patton, Haluk BilginerHorror | 100% |
Thriller | 38% |
Video codec: HEVC / H.265
Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: DTS:X
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
Spanish: DTS 5.1
French (Canada): DTS 5.1
English SDH, French, Spanish
Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (2 BDs)
Digital copy
4K Ultra HD
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 3.5 | |
Video | 4.5 | |
Audio | 4.0 | |
Extras | 2.5 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
The macro-level history behind the Halloween movies isn't particularly interesting. After a very successful and genre-defining original classic, the franchise veered into the standard Horror franchise fast lane which it admittedly help shape, spitting out a number of lore-building films, standalone sequels, a franchise film in title only, and a pair of reboots. Indeed, the Halloween brand has essentially taken the path of least resistance through its now forty-year history with various stabs at creativity but largely selling audiences on a name and an expressionless Shape rather than honest character depth and narrative integrity. With this 2018 film, Director David Gordon Green (Pineapple Express) has done something to shake the film loose from the clutches of closed-minded constraints and built a film that ignores decades of Halloween storylines -- including those featuring Jamie Lee Curtis reprising her role as Laurie Strode -- and builds this Halloween as the one and only true sequel to John Carpenter's original.
The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc. Watch for 4K screenshots at a later date.
Like so many of its contemporaries, Halloween was shot on digital, reportedly at a resolution of 2.8K and upscaled to 4K for this UHD
release. The franchise, of course, has its roots in film and, until now, every picture in the franchise had been shot on film,
including
the pair of Rob Zombie movies. It's a bit of a disappointment, then, that David Gordon Green and
Cinematographer Michael Simmonds chose to break tradition, but it is 2018 and, for better or for worse, digital is becoming, if it has not
already become, the de
facto "new normal" in Hollywood.
The UHD offers an honest, though certainly not extraordinary, upgrade from the Blu-ray. The improvements to sharpness under the 4K resolution are
tangible, but modest. Clarity and fine details enjoy a small boost over the Blu-ray, leaving environments, faces, and objects with a little more definition
than the 1080p image can produce. The HDR colors are not revelatory, either, but they do make for the biggest area of improvement on the UHD disc.
There's
an obvious jump from the SDR Blu-ray that comparatively lacks the fullness and crispness the HDR colors provide. Skin tones are deeper and more
lifelike, the red checkerboard titles seen at the mental hospital in a key early scene are much more intense, and whites the patients and Dr. Sartain
wear are far more crisp, punchy, and well saturated. Natural greens, fall colors, festive Halloween color cues, and nighttime black levels all enjoy
greater depth. The UHD solidifies the colors a good bit, and the Blu-ray's color palette almost looks dull and unhealthy in comparison. Noise
management is
slightly improved and the UHD, like the Blu-ray, reveals no bothersome source or encode maladies. HDR makes this one the clear winner over the
Blu-ray, even if the image is otherwise nothing special in the grand scheme of the UHD universe.
Halloween's DTS:X soundtrack does not often take full advantage or make discrete use of the overhead channels at its disposal, but the track otherwise makes for a fundamentally sound listen. The track builds a full, able-bodied presentation in which music is the most obvious beneficiary of length and clarity. The soundtrack is every bit as effective as one would expect it to be. Musical engagement is wonderful. The opening title track delivers precision notes of a familiar refrain, a wonderful reproduction of Carpenter's original, iconic score. The presentation thereof is largely the front end's task, with modest surround integration only. Such holds true for much of the film. Music is definitely more up front than it is evenly distributed through the rears. The front left and right channels carry the bulk while the back channels, and the overheads, for that matter, offer a complimentary fill that does not absolutely immerse the listener into the score but that does create a fuller listening sensation. Clarity is terrific, essential in detecting and appreciating the details within the original refrain as well as many of the more edgy and experimental notes that define some of the track's more intensive, weighty notes. The subwoofer is used in a complimentary fashion for musical support and does not extend itself prodigiously at any point in the track. Gunshots lack thunderous depth and could even be said to a moderate sonic disappointment, but the low end does find some depth when a car runs a character over in chapter 15 and at a few moments during the final confrontation. Along with music, dialogue is the sonic mainstay and the presentation thereof is without flaw, playing with seamless clarity and positioning and expert prioritization when competing with any surrounding elements.
Halloween's UHD disc contains all of the supplements found on the Blu-ray, which is also included. A Movies Anywhere digital copy code is
included with purchase. The release ships with an embossed slipcover.
Halloween is a good movie that is a little too reliant on genre structure and paying its respects to the original. It's also more risk-averse than it should be. When the film takes its biggest risk with the best opportunity for long-term reward, is squashes the potential to take the film and franchise in a new and interesting direction that could have better defined the psychosis that exists within, and extends from, Michael Myers. Instead, Director David Gordon Green is content to build a movie that is well made and a worthy successor to the original but one that doesn't allow the apple to fall too far from the tree. Universal's UHD delivers a solid image, one that bests the Blu-ray largely through a more solidified color spread under the HDR encoding. The DTS:X audio is strong and the supplements are worth watching but a little too brief. Recommended.
2017
2018
1981
Collector's Edition
1978
2009
2013
Unrated Director's Cut
2009
2019
Unrated
2005
Uncut
2013
Extended Cut
2021
Limited Edition
1980
2012
Collector's Edition
1988
2012
2014
2018
2018
1982
2022