7 | / 10 |
Users | 3.8 | |
Reviewer | 3.5 | |
Overall | 3.6 |
Welcome to Hotel Transylvania, Dracula's lavish five-stake resort, where monsters and their families can live it up, free to be the monsters they are without humans to bother them. On one special weekend, Dracula has invited some of the world's most famous monsters - Frankenstein and his wife, the Mummy, the Invisible Man, a family of werewolves, and more - to celebrate his daughter Mavis' 118th birthday. For Dracula, catering to all of these legendary monsters is no problem - but his world could come crashing down when a human stumbles on the hotel for the first time and takes a shine to Mavis.
Starring: Adam Sandler, Kevin James, Selena Gómez, Steve Buscemi, David SpadeFamily | 100% |
Animation | 84% |
Comedy | 70% |
Video codec: MPEG-4 MVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
French: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
English, English SDH, French, Spanish
50GB Blu-ray Disc
Three-disc set (2 BDs, 1 DVD)
UV digital copy
DVD copy
Blu-ray 3D
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A, B (C untested)
Movie | 3.5 | |
Video | 5.0 | |
Audio | 5.0 | |
Extras | 3.0 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
Yes exactly. A hotel for monsters. Way to sum it up.
The computer-animated family picture has become a mainstream mainstay of cinema. It seems hardly a week goes by when there isn't some sort of
digital kid-centric creation in theaters or coming to home video after what is usually a very profitable and lengthy run at multiplexes all over
the world. And count on them selling more than a few copies on Blu-ray; kids want to see them time and again, learn the lines, come to love the
characters, and revel in the silly escapades and flashy colors. Unlike live-action cinema, however, there's still some novelty at work in the digital
industry, stories with hearts and new thematic twists and interesting dramatic currents flowing through an abundance of charm and a plethora of
laughs. Hotel Transylvania, on the other hand, doesn't quite find the same range of interesting new ideas; it's instead content to tell an
incredibly
basic story of an overprotective father, here set not in suburbia or the big city but rather in the middle of nowhere where monsters live apart and far
away from their human enemies. The film embraces cliché -- most of these sorts of films do -- and has a lot of fun with classic motifs, but it never
distinguishes its story as anything more than a routine and predictable run towards the happily-ever-after conclusion (replete with pop-inspired songs
that will have the little ones dancing up a storm). The movie works well as mindless entertainment with a lot of fun characters and situations, but
don't expect to be dazzled by the disappointingly stale storyline.
When a dad takes the notion of sheltering his daughter quite literally.
Hotel Transylvania's Blu-ray 3D transfer isn't scary good, unfortunately, but all is not lost. Sony's 1.85:1-framed 3D image does deliver the same high-end traditional visual elements as its 2D-only counterpart (also included on a separate disc in this set). The image loses nothing in 3D in terms of detail and colors. The same splendid textures, crisp lines, and impeccable sharpness are cornerstones of every digital frame. Likewise, the color palette remains of a perfect quality, a bit dark and warm due to the film's nature but resplendent nonetheless and no less vibrant under the added 3D elements. Black levels remain strong, but a hint of banding does creep in for a few shots, though not hardly enough to warrant more than a brief mention. As for the 3D elements themselves, they really don't add a whole lot to the movie. The picture produces a decent amount of general depth, but there are plenty of scenes that are almost indistinguishable from the 2D transfer. Still, some objects take on a noticeably more lifelike shape, spacing between characters and objects proves a little more obvious in some shots, and there are a handful of exciting extra-screen elements, objects seeming to zip and and out of the television or hovering beyond the screen. It's not a knockout 3D transfer by any stretch of the imagination, but there's just enough here to warrant a watch in 3D; just don't count on Hotel Transylvania to stretch a 3D system to its limits.
Sony's Hotel Transylvania scares up a wonderful DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack. The presentation offers a full, constant surround support that's natural, enveloping, and exciting. There's a steady flow of elements into the rear speakers, whether wide and swooping action elements that maneuver all over the stage or precision sound effects that help to fully immerse the listener into the castle and surrounding exteriors. There's fantastic clarity to music, whether playful score or full-on Rock- and Pop-inspired tunes. Even at its most aggressive, music remains tight and very clear, with fine details throughout the entire range and a strong low-end support element. The track really rocks out during its musical numbers, found in chapters seven and twelve and again at film's end. There's a pleasing ambience in several exterior scenes and fantastic immersive clarity even in the more quiet, dialogue-oriented moments, such as a father-daughter rooftop chat in chapter thirteen. General dialogue is clear and focused in the center channel, spreading out naturally when necessary. This is a wonderful, fun, active, and pitch-perfect track from Sony.
Hotel Transylvania contains a good number of (mostly) technically oriented supplements. Amongst the non-technical extras is a short film
and a collection of deleted scenes. All extras are accessible on the 3D disc, but only the previews are in 3D.
Hotel Transylvania lacks passion from its voice cast and really lacks even a semblance of a novel script, but never mind that. The target audience is going to adore this film for its lovable and safe monstrous characters, the bright colors, the slick animation, and the song-and-dance routines that dot the film's entire digital landscape. Even for the grown-ups who know how it's going to end almost before it starts, the film provides a decent little diversion and, if nothing else, watching the younger ones having a ball with the movie should alone be worth the price of admission. Sony's Blu-ray 3D release of Hotel Transylvania offers the same good array of extras found on the 2D disc. The audio transfer is stellar but the 3D elements aren't really worth the added cost.
2012
Bonus Disc
2012
2012
Includes Activity Book
2012
Bilingual
2012
Hotel Transylvania 3 Movie Cash
2012
2012
2015
Monster Party Edition
2018
2012
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