7.3 | / 10 |
Users | 4.3 | |
Reviewer | 4.5 | |
Overall | 4.3 |
Aliens launch an all-out invasion against the human race. The world's only hope lies with survivors, uniting for a strike against the invaders.
Starring: Will Smith, Bill Pullman, Jeff Goldblum, Mary McDonnell, Judd HirschAction | 100% |
Adventure | 72% |
Sci-Fi | 58% |
Thriller | 40% |
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: Dolby Digital 5.1
French: DTS 5.1
German: DTS 5.1
Italian: DTS 5.1
Japanese: DTS 5.1
English SDH, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish
Blu-ray Disc
Three-disc set (3 BDs)
UV digital copy
4K Ultra HD
Region A, B (C untested)
Movie | 4.5 | |
Video | 5.0 | |
Audio | 5.0 | |
Extras | 4.0 | |
Overall | 4.5 |
Note: The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc. Watch for 4K screenshots at a later date.
20th Century Fox has re-released the fan favorite 'Independence Day' to UHD, following up on the remastered 1080p version released in May 2016. The UHD disc boasts HDR
coloring, 2160p resolution, and DTS:X sound. No new supplemental content is included; all extras carry over from the above-linked two-disc set on
the
identical 1080p discs
(commentaries and an interactive feature carry over to the UHD disc, too). The 4K release also includes both the film's theatrical and extended
cuts, as does the basic 1080p disc.
They're here, and they look and sound better than ever.
Independence Day was re-released to Blu-ray only weeks prior to the UHD
version's debut. Fox's 1080p presentation really nailed down the image quality. It was practically perfect, leaving precious little room to
complain
or, seemingly, improve. While the 2160p UHD is more a refinement of an already excellent image rather than a total reworking, the results are
clearly
very strong. The UHD captures the same basic essence as the 1080p Blu-ray. Grain structure is refined and even, yielding a gorgeous cinematic
texturing. Details are deeply informative and very well textured. From standard faces and clothes to more refined details, like dust and fine
scratches on the biplane, there's no mistaking the transfer's ability to reveal every inch of detail in a naturally opportunistic manner. Color balance is
terrific across the film's varied filters, regardless of time of day, interior or exterior, low light or high sun. It is, at-a-glance, the mirror image of the
1080p transfer in terms of overall excellence.
It's the direct A-B comparisons where things begin to get more interesting. The UHD is certainly more refined, yielding finer, if not only extremely
so, details. Take a look at the President in bed around the 5:20 mark. Skin texturing is more apparent on the UHD; the Blu-ray lacks the finesse and
finer points of definition on the face, favoring a markedly smoother appearance. The image is also significantly lighter; there's a rather severe orange
push on the Blu-ray, where the UHD is much cooler, evident in everything: skin, the T-shirt, the upholstery on the bed's headboard. Skip ahead a
minute or so to where the President is eating breakfast. The yellow rug is punchier on the Blu-ray, whereas the UHD favors a more neutral look
about it. Another great spot to compare both color and detail -- the former in particular -- comes about halfway through the movie at the 1:13:20
mark. Will Smith, wearing a green military tank top, stands behind a bright orange parachute and in front of a clear and bright blue sky. First, the
increase in
material detail is plainly obvious, on the parachute in particular but also on Smith's shirt and skin. On the UHD, the colors are significantly more
saturated. The orange is bolder, as is the sky, both by a wide and immediately noticeable margin. Whether one or the other is technically "correct" is
up for debate, but there's no mistaking that the UHD's HDR-influenced vibrance, combined with the increase in detail, is striking. Such contrasts
hold throughout the
movie.
Both versions look terrific. Are Blu-ray owners missing out? Yes. In a noticeable way that makes the Blu-ray look "bad" on its own? No
way. The UHD is certainly a step up in terms of detail and clarity and raw cinematic texturing. Colors may be altered, but they're much more
refined in places and punchier where they count. The UHD comes out on top.
Uh, wow. Fox's previous Blu-ray releases of Independence Day, both the above referenced re-release and, of course, the original from 2008, contained fantastic DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless
soundtracks, but
this...this takes the experience to a brand new level. The UHD release contains a "premium" DTS:X sound experience that, for as good as the older
tracks were, absolutely destroys the 5.1 mixes in terms of definition, aggression, and immersion alike. The DTS:X soundtrack adds not only an
additional two channels to the rear but also multiple overheads as well, and Fox's release takes full and obvious advantage. This review is based an
11.1 setup,
which includes four overheard channels to the more traditional 7.1 mix. One could argue that the track is simply too aggressive, and it does border
on
the extreme at times, particularly at reference volume. But it's a blast. The opening title letters fly back into the rear with amazing weight and pull
through the listening area. Music is powerful and room filling, utilizing every speaker that's not an overhead channel to full advantage. The
surrounds
are arguably a bit too aggressive at times in delivering music, but the satisfaction level is off the charts. The end result is a tremendously potent and
immersive experience that really works
with
a movie of this style and scale.
Of course, that also holds true for action. This is currently the track that should be selling sound systems with height channels.
Showrooms:
take
notice. Russell Casse's biplane, as he's dusting the wrong field, zips overhead with incredible lifelike detail and maneuvering. Anyone who's been to
an airshow and
remembers the sound of prop planes buzzing at low altitude overhead will experience that here. It's one of the best overhead effects this reviewer
has
yet heard. And the party is only getting started. The alien ships arrive in Earth's atmosphere with an amazingly potent rumble and weight, a slow,
heavy push into the skies that's worthy of their mammoth size. The "welcome wagon" helicopter hefts through the stage, back to front, with
lifelike definition. An AWACS plane is destroyed and fire rushes through the stage, front to back and overheard, too, with a gust of intensity rarely
experienced in a home (or theater, for that matter) soundtrack. Air Force One taxis and takes off, chased by a ball of fire, with enough power in the
engines to lift the plane and escape, with so much attention to detail, mixed with raw power, that one practically wants earplugs. Fighter jets zip
around with precise imaging and action-matching directionality. The alien fighters, with their unique sound signatures, likewise zoom through the
stage with
impressive positioning. The dog fights practically place the listener in the cockpits.
The alien attack -- when the big guns first open up and destroy several major cities -- is resiliently deep, punishing, immersive, and rattles and rocks
the soundstage to its core. The blasts themselves are ridiculously deep and dense, but it's the destruction that follows that really puts the
system through its paces. Cars flip over -- and through, including above -- the stage. Great balls of fire, practically on a Biblical scale, power
through with striking intensity and room filling placement. Of all the great bits in the soundtrack, that first attack is the most impressive given its
scale, longevity in runtime, and absolute full-on use of the entire soundstage, top channels included. Of course, the track doesn't forget about the
little
stuff, at least little in comparison. A bullet ricochets with startling movement around, and above, the stage when the heroes are testing their ability
to lower the alien shields to start the third act. Overhead speakers emit voice communications in command centers with realistic room filling delivery.
The TV offices where David Levinson works spring to life in a few scenes, featuring a cluster of background noise that superbly defines the location.
The track is truly something special. Add in perfectly clear and prioritized dialogue, and this is arguably the most entertaining soundtrack ever to
make its way into a home theater.
Independence Day contains a UV/iTunes digital copy code and supplements on all three discs, some of which repeat between resolutions and
most of which are exclusive to
the 1080p supplemental bonus disc. Please click here for a full review. For convenience, below is a
disc-by-disc breakdown of what's included:
UHD Disc:
20th Century Fox's UHD Blu-ray release of Independence Day is...inspiring. Amazing. A reason, certainly, for the film's hardcore fans, and those who just enjoy aggressive multichannel audio and film-quality picture, to jump on the UHD bandwagon. Truly, there may not be an Action movie Blu-ray that so regularly and, within the film's context, rightly pushes the format's abilities quite so hard as this. It's a revelation, the sound more so than the picture (which was terrific on the 1080p remaster disc and even more so here), and unquestionably one of the top showroom ready, reference releases of all time. For UHD owners, and particularly those with the ability to fully enjoy the DTS:X soundtrack, this is a must own all-time great reference release and earns my highest recommendation.
1996
Special Edition | Fox Icons
1996
Awards O-Ring Slipcover
1996
1996
1996
1996
20th Anniversary Edition | Remastered
1996
20th Anniversary Ultimate Collector's Edition
1996
20th Anniversary Edition
1996
20th Anniversary Edition | Limited Edition
1996
20th Anniversary Edition | 4 Exclusive Mondo Cards + Alien: Covenant Movie Cash
1996
Comic Con Exclusive
1996
2016
Limited Edition
1997
2012
20th Anniversary
2003
1998
2004
2009
2013
2011
Director's Cut
2009
2022
2014
15th Anniversary Edition
2005
1991
2018
2010
2013
1986
2014
2011