5.6 | / 10 |
Users | 4.0 | |
Reviewer | 3.0 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
A man discovers that his hallucinations are actually visions from past lives.
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Sophie Cookson, Dylan O'Brien, Jason MantzoukasSci-Fi | 100% |
Thriller | Insignificant |
Video codec: HEVC / H.265
Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: Dolby Atmos
English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
French: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
Portuguese: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish
Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Digital copy
4K Ultra HD
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A (B, C untested)
Movie | 1.5 | |
Video | 0.0 | |
Audio | 4.5 | |
Extras | 2.0 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
Mark Wahlberg and Antoine Fuqua, who collaborated together on Shooter, reunite for Infinite, a "sad state of affairs" movie that is quite possibly the worst of either of their careers. The film, based on the 2009 novel The Reincarnationist Papers by D. Eric Maikranz, builds a compelling narrative hook but quickly fumbles it away through a deluge of pitifully poor performances, lackadaisical scriptwriting, underwhelming plot dynamics, stale action, and so on and so forth. The end result is a film that is barely watchable and only partway coherent. It's no surprise it never even went to theaters and even less of a surprise that it earned the ignominious honor of accruing several well-deserved Golden Raspberry nominations.
The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc.
Paramount brings Infinite to the UHD format day-and-date with the companion Blu-ray. This is the superior version, but it is not a major upgrade, not a
leaps-and-bounds type of improvement. Viewers will note, especially when conducting A-B comparisons, that the UHD squeezes out a little finer detail,
noticeable
on faces, for example, where more intimate skin textures and very fine pores are apparent whereas such are a little less precise and sharp on the
Blu-ray. The same goes for clothes, environments, anything and everything on the screen. Gains to sharpness and clarity are evident, but marginal. The
Dolby Vision color grading proves to be brighter overall with more intensely brilliant whites, deeper blacks, and more favorably intense and deeper
coloring across the film's varied spectrum. Skin tones are a delight for natural orientation and nuanced tonal definition. The picture reveals very little
noise, no other grave source anomalies, and barely a hint of encode artifacts. This is a very nice presentation, but it's not worlds away better than the
Blu-ray; either format suits the material quite nicely.
Paramount brings Infinite to the UHD format with a Dolby Atmos soundtrack that is typical of a big budget contemporary Sci-Fi/Action track. It is appropriately large and endlessly clear and detailed. Action scenes are, of course, the highlight for the barrage of intense yet well-defined and exacting sound elements that produce, well, infinite stage saturation and dynamic goodness. Surround engagement is steady, subwoofer output is as prominent as it needs to be, and the track never has a problem in drawing the listener into the mayhem and transforming the listening area into the center of action, including some well-integrated, but not necessarily discrete, top end characteristics. The track is expert at handling quieter moments as well, yielding positive atmospherics. Musical engagement is excellent, featuring stout front side presence and, like the action, balanced surround and subwoofer content. Dialogue is clear and center positioned for the duration.
This UHD release of Infinite includes four featurettes. Blu-ray and digital copies are included with purchase. This release ships with a
non-embossed slipcover.
Infinite is infinitely forgettable. Where a commendably strong film might have been is instead reduced to cut-rate genre moviemaking that admittedly looks slick, but which is clearly and painfully hollow underneath. That the film is at least technically sound is about the only good thing that can be said of it, which is a shame because Antoine Fuqua is one of this reviewer's favorite filmmakers. Everyone's entitled to a bad movie, I guess. Paramount's UHD is not bad at all, so fans should be pleased in that arena. The video and audio presentations are very good and the studio has bundled in a few extras, too. Skip it.
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