Independence Day: Resurgence 3D Blu-ray Movie

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Independence Day: Resurgence 3D Blu-ray Movie United States

Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray + UV Digital Copy
20th Century Fox | 2016 | 120 min | Rated PG-13 | Oct 18, 2016

Independence Day: Resurgence 3D (Blu-ray Movie)

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Movie rating

5.5
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users4.2 of 54.2
Reviewer2.0 of 52.0
Overall2.6 of 52.6

Overview

Independence Day: Resurgence 3D (2016)

Two decades after the first Independence Day invasion, Earth is faced with a new extra-Solar threat. But will mankind's new space defenses be enough?

Starring: Liam Hemsworth, Jeff Goldblum, Jessie T. Usher, Bill Pullman, Maika Monroe
Director: Roland Emmerich

Action100%
Adventure82%
Sci-Fi68%

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 MVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
    Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1
    Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
    French: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Portuguese: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Russian: DTS 5.1
    Turkish: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Ukrainian: Dolby Digital 5.1

  • Subtitles

    English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic, Danish, Estonian, Finnish, Hebrew, Icelandic, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Russian, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (2 BDs)
    UV digital copy
    Blu-ray 3D

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region free 

Review

Rating summary

Movie2.0 of 52.0
Video4.5 of 54.5
Audio5.0 of 55.0
Extras0.0 of 50.0
Overall2.0 of 52.0

Independence Day: Resurgence 3D Blu-ray Movie Review

Is "regurgitance" a word (in 3D)?

Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman October 20, 2016

The tagline for Independence Day: Resurgence states “We had twenty years to prepare,” and the same of course might be said for this film’s creative crew, who took two decades (more or less, not counting pre-production, of course) to craft a sequel to 1996’s blockbuster extravaganza Independence Day. Considering the less than rapturous response Independence Day: Resurgence received from both critics and (at least some) audience members when it was released theatrically, some wag might suggest that Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin needed twenty one years (at a minimum) to really think through the ins and outs of this follow up. This is one of those special effects spectaculars that seemingly has everything money can buy, and yet which can look surprisingly cheap at times and which never builds to anything like the emotional fervor that made the first film so memorable. The film tries to weave together a navigable story built out of some of the rubble left after the alien incursion in the first film, bringing back a bevy of characters from that enterprise while also introducing a gaggle of newcomers (in what is assumed to be an attempt to craft a foundation for a new franchise, even if the next installment doesn’t appear until 2036). The overstuffed screenplay repeatedly references the first film while also working in weird subplots that seem like distant echoes of films like Top Gun . Filled with the sort of CGI wonderment that has become de rigeur in today’s science fiction cinematic universe, Independence Day: Resurgence provides occasional thrills, but is so concerned with ticking off predictable plot points that it forgets what made the first film kind of unique in the annals of overblown “alien invasion” movies: it had heart. Few who watched the first film back in the day were able to avoid a lump in their throat over the family dynamics of President Whitmore (Bill Pullman), and few similarly were able to keep from cheering (if only virtually) when Steven Hiller (Will Smith) laid down some serious butt kicking on one particular alien. Had Emmerich and Devlin merely gone for the gusto in SFX overkill (which they do, just not “merely”), Independence Day: Resurgence might have satisfied both fans of the first film and those who are way too young to remember what “July 4, 1996” means. However, it’s obvious that the pair (reunited for this film) have grander ambitions to forge another film that somehow doesn’t lose its humanity in the wake of an alien invasion (no pun intended), and it’s here that Independence Day: Resurgence tends to falter.


Whitmore may not be president any more, but he’s still experiencing nightmares. Who knows what Dr. Brakish Okun (Brent Spiner) is experiencing, since he’s basically a brainwave flatline as a coma patient? David Levinson (Jeff Goldblum) has assumed some of Okun’s duties in the wake of that development, and he still has a lovably bantering relationship with his father Julius (Judd Hirsch) who like any good Jew has retired to Florida. While Steven Hiller isn’t around any longer, his stepson Dylan (Jessie Usher) is poised to follow in his heroic footsteps, hob nobbing with the high and mighty like President Elizabeth Lanford (Sela Ward). Lanford’s speech writer is a former denizen of the White House, Whitmore’s daughter Patricia (Maika Monroe), now an appealing and very smart young woman. Patricia is concerned that Dylan’s contentious relationship with fellow pilot Jake Morrison (Liam Hemsworth) will lead to needless conflict (three guesses if it does, and how that all works out).

Needless to say, there wouldn’t be a movie if those nasty aliens didn’t make a return appearance, and they’re actually seen early on, evidently reacting in sheer horror to the fact that those pesky humans managed to beat them back twenty years ago. Meanwhile various people, including Whitmore and, are experiencing weird visions of impending disaster, with several folks channeling a vision of weird circular object that plays awfully similarly to a certain pile of mashed potatoes in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Okun’s condition also suddenly changes, with the patently odd scientist suddenly awakening from his twenty year sleep. Mankind is (hopefully) being protected by the Earth Space Defense, an organization formed in the wake of the first alien attack and which has utilized some of the alien technology to forge new weaponry.

It’s almost pointless to tick off the various nooks and crannies of the plot, since Independence Day: Resurgence doesn’t really do anything surprising along the way. The aliens are nasty, with a Queen (why is it always a Queen) kind of symbiotically controlling the attack, and the humans kick into high gear to get to her to bring down the entire invading array. Friendships are tested, scientific strategies are questioned, love affairs blossom, and it all unfolds pretty much exactly as one might expect. The film is long on spectacle, even if much of it has the flat aspect of greenscreen work, but awfully short on actual human emotion, the one element that really seemed to set the original Independence Day apart from its alien invasion kin. It’s obvious that Emmerich and Devlin rather belatedly came to the conclusion they had the makings of a franchise, even if the second installment took two decades to arrive. My hunch is after this largely haphazard array of characters, plot contrivances and hyperbolic effects work the two may be reconsidering that strategy.


Independence Day: Resurgence 3D Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  4.5 of 5

Independence Day: Resurgence 3D is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment with an MVC encoded 1080p transfer in 2.39:1. A 2D Blu-ray is also included in this package, and for my thoughts on that presentation and the general look of the film, please refer to our Independence Day: Resurgence Blu-ray review. The 3D experience is curiously undercooked quite a bit of the time, something that may be at least partially due to the overweening darkness of so much of the film, something I mentioned in the 2D review. Oddly, there's still decent immersion in some of the outer space sequences, where starfields have obvious planes of depth. Space ships also tend to emerge from backgrounds relatively convincingly at several key junctures. But some of the most significant depth comes courtesy of pretty mundane scenes, like brief shots of offices or the ESD headquarters, where foreground objects (people or props) clearly help to delineate depth. This seems like an odd tendency for a film built around such overt use of special visual effects. The omnipresence of so much greenscreen work tends to make backgrounds look pretty flat even when there is some dimensionality in front of them.


Independence Day: Resurgence 3D Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  5.0 of 5

Independence Day: Resurgence features a bombastic DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 mix which provides everything audiophiles have come to expect from these science fiction spectaculars. Cool rumbling LFE accompanies several reveals of various calamities, including of course the arrival of the alien mothership, but there are also some excellent effects in several set pieces both on the moon base and back home on Earth. Huge panning effects accompany many of the flying sequences (alien and otherwise), and the encroaching fiery cloud that is a spectacular visual effect also has its attendant sound and fury. Dialogue (such as it is) is rendered cleanly and clearly and is well prioritized, and the brass inflected score also sounds bright and inviting, spreading quite naturally through the surround channels. Dynamic range is extremely wide on this problem free track.


Independence Day: Resurgence 3D Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  n/a of 5

The 3D Blu-ray contains no supplemental material. The 2D Blu-ray included in this package includes the same supplements detailed in our Independence Day: Resurgence Blu-ray review.


Independence Day: Resurgence 3D Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  2.0 of 5

There's an old adage that runs something like "too little, too late," but in the case of Independence Day: Resurgence that might be more accurately amended to read "too much, way too late." It's obvious how Emmerich and Devlin (along with their collaborators) sought to reinvigorate this putative franchise, attempting to organically weave it into the first film while providing enough new content (and characters) to thrust things forward, but the film just seems overstuffed, overblown and weirdly lethargic a lot of the time. Performances are okay but hardly inspiring, and even the effects work look a little flat some of the time. Those who are willing to simply shut down their brains and enjoy the film for its still intermittently impressive visuals and hyperbolic sound design may enjoy things as far as they go, and for them, technical merits are strong, though the 3D effects are often surprisingly bland. The supplementary package on this release is also above average, for those considering a purchase.