7.5 | / 10 |
Users | 3.4 | |
Reviewer | 3.0 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
High school basketball is king in small-town Indiana, and the 1954 Hickory Huskers are all hope and no talent. But their new coach, abrasive and unlikable Norman Dale, whips the team into shape... while also inciting controversy.
Starring: Gene Hackman, Barbara Hershey, Dennis Hopper, Sheb Wooley, Fern PersonsSport | 100% |
Drama | 43% |
Video codec: MPEG-2
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English: Dolby Digital 4.0 (Original)
French: Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono (224 kbps)
Spanish: Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono (224 kbps)
Note: Dolby Digital 4.0 (448 kbps)
English SDH, French, Spanish
25GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Region A (locked)
Movie | 3.5 | |
Video | 3.0 | |
Audio | 3.0 | |
Extras | 0.5 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
Stop me if you’ve heard this one: a rag-tag team of scrappy misfits—playing David to the opposition’s Goliath—bands together, beats the incalculable odds, and emerges victoriously as hometown heroes, miraculously transforming themselves—through blood, sweat, and tears—from down-and-out underdogs to the lauded leaders of the pack. Sound familiar? The standard-issue inspirational sports film is perhaps the most formulaic of narrative formulas, prone to cliché, chest- heaving sentimentalism, and the overuse of training montages set to fist-pumping tunes. (Having recently reviewed Rocky: The Undisputed Collection, I feel qualified in making this claim.) But despite the predictability, audiences love feel-good stories where small fries take down the super-sized. While Hoosiers didn’t invent the formula, it is one of the standouts of a cluttered genre, thanks to a few excellent performances and the universality of the film’s message of perseverance, acceptance, and redemption. I’m admittedly not much of a sports fan, but even I get caught up in the film’s rah rah sis boom bah sense of teamwork and fighting spirit.
"First of all, let's be real friendly here, okay? My name is Norm. Secondly, your coaching days are over."
Hoosiers premiered on Blu-ray in March of 2007, sporting a 1080p/MPEG-2 transfer that really didn't do the film any favors. Looking at Hoosiers today, the video deficiencies are all the more evident when you consider some of the remarkable restorations given to catalog titles in the past two years. I'm no fan of DNR—if a movie was shot on film, I expect it to look that way—but Hoosiers is speckled with a persistently heavy grain field that commingles with source noise to create a buzzing, fluctuating membrane that covers the image almost constantly, but is especially apparent in shots of the sky and characters' faces. Granted, I prefer this to waxy smearing, but a good bit of detail is lost in some of the heavier patches of grain. The image is at its best during game time—in the well-lit gymnasiums—with nicely carved contrast, a satisfying sense of clarity, and the Huskers' red and yellow uniforms popping cleanly off the screen. Outside the gym, however, the picture often falters. Black levels can crush the detail in Hackman's pea coat or else look hazy and insubstantial, contrast is sometimes bland, and sharpness varies from scene to scene. The film is occasionally very crisp—see the wrinkles on Hackman's face or the weft in his tweed suit jacket—but this simply doesn't hold up throughout. The image certainly isn't bad, but you get a feeling watching Hoosiers that it could certainly look a lot better.
While Hoosiers ships with a lossless DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround track, the sound
is nearly as disappointing as the visuals. This is an almost entirely front-heavy track, and there
were instances when I craned toward my rear speakers, wondering if perhaps they had come
unplugged. There's almost nothing here to suggest a dimensional soundfield. While you'll
occasionally hear cheering in the surround channels and a modicum of environmental ambience
—like the reverb during Norman's introduction of the team at the school assembly—this track
misses a lot of opportunities for true 5.1 engagement. When Norman first enters the school and
students flood down the stairs and out of classrooms past him, where are their footsteps or the
sound of casual hallway chatter? There's a decent spread across the front channels, but there are
long stretches of the film where it might as well be monophonic.
As I mentioned in the review, I'm not a big fan of Jerry Goldsmith's score here—seriously, why
the big drum machine beats?—and the music, along with being monumentally incongruous,
sounds unremarkable, with hardly any real bass response. Dialogue is mostly clean and clear, but
every once in awhile it seems boxy and thin, particularly when Norman shouts from the sidelines.
And what's up with the cheering from the stands? Instead of thunderous uproar, it sounds like a
crowd as filtered and flattened through the speakers of a portable AM radio. I understand that
this 5.1 track has been repurposed from somewhat dated source material, but I've heard other
films from the same era that sound much bigger, immersive, and dynamically solid.
On the menu of this disc you'll notice a tab that reads "Special Features." As in, features with an 's,' plural, like, more than one. Click it open and you'll find the Hoosiers Theatrical Trailer (1080p, 2:38) all by its lonesome. Seriously, how hard would it have been to port over the substantial features that were included on the special edition DVD? Perhaps MGM is planning a double-dip for the film's 25th anniversary in 2011. If MGM is still around, that is. Elsewhere on the disc you'll find high definition trailers for Rocky, Hart's War, and Flyboys.
I'd be willing to be that, if you asked 100 people what their favorite sports film is, there would be an almost equal split between Hoosiers and Rudy, which, considering the abundance of sports films out there, is quite a cinematic coup for writer Angelo Pizzo and director David Anspaugh. Despite a weirdly incongruous soundtrack and some dated editing techniques, Hoosiers holds up fairly well today. Unfortunately, this Blu-ray edition of the film leaves a lot to be desired, as it features middling video quality, an adequate but unimpressive audio track, and a stripped down package of supplementary features that includes only a theatrical trailer. If you're a fan of the film, you really can't go wrong with Amazon's current price, but just be aware of what you're getting.
1986
25th Anniversary Edition
1986
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1986
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1986
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