5.6 | / 10 |
Users | 2.2 | |
Reviewer | 3.5 | |
Overall | 3.4 |
A horror/thriller centered on the origin of the monsters that are born in childhood and are passed on by the family.
Starring: Clive Owen, Carice van Houten, Daniel Brühl, Ella Purnell, Pilar López de AyalaHorror | 100% |
Thriller | 81% |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: Dolby TrueHD 5.1 (48kHz, 16-bit)
English: Dolby Digital 2.0 (256 kbps)
English SDH, Spanish
25GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A (locked)
Movie | 3.5 | |
Video | 4.5 | |
Audio | 4.5 | |
Extras | 1.5 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
It was only a nightmare.
It's been too long since Director Juan Carlos Juan Carlos Fresnadillo has stepped behind the camera. His last outing came with 2007's 28 Weeks Later, the slickly-crafted and entertaining follow-up to Director
Danny Boyle's superb 28 Days Later. That gap between pictures is simply too long for a director
of Fresnadillo's skill. His latest, the Clive Owen (The International)-starring Chiller Intruders, lacks thematic heft
and a tight script, but Fresnadillo turns a rattly Horror story into an wonderfully atmospheric and involved little picture that overcomes its shortcomings
with a good bit of flair and directorial know-how. Despite a fairly convoluted plot that, even when it sorts out the specifics in the final minutes, almost
demands audiences re-watch with the ending in mind to truly get a grasp on the who's, what's, when's, where's and why's of the story, the
movie
plays the first time through with a confident air, solidified by that intoxicatingly moody direction and convincing performances that keep the movie
flowing even if the story never quite finds that air of importance or that influx of intensity to really build Intruders into the complete
picture it so desperately wants to be and should have been.
The end and the beginning.
Intruders features a 1080p transfer that's reflective of the film's natural slightly soft and gloomy photography. Millennium's 1080p transfer delivers a nicely filmic, nearly spotless image that should satisfy all comers. Though slightly soft by nature, the image captures fabulously rich, natural details, whether human faces, general clothing textures, or stunningly realistic exteriors, both natural green foliage and stone and brick structures. Colors are dim by design, often having been gobbled up by the shadows and low-lighting conditions, but viewers will spot some accurate, stable shadings in a handful of brightly-lit interiors; warm, sun-drenched exteriors; and even some overcast London daytime shots, an example coming early in the film in a scene featuring John and a co-worker high atop a construction site, both men wearing blazing-orange safety vests (even if the scene appears to have been filmed in a soundstage). Shadow detail is critical to the film's success -- the dark visuals must remain convincingly so -- and Millennium's transfer delivers some consistently great blacks. Likewise, flesh tones are presented with a true, accurate coloring. The image does feature a few trace spots and speckles, but hardly enough to cause alarm. Light grain retention stabilizes the image, and the transfer appears largely free of any bothersome banding, edge enhancement, blocking, or unnatural smoothness. This is a wonderful, very rich, film-like transfer, the kind that Blu-ray is all about.
Intruders features a precise, involved, and complete Dolby TrueHD 5.1 lossless soundtrack. Music delivery enjoys constant smoothness, whether lighter, flowing notes or sharper, piercing Horror movie-style shrieks and sonic jumps. Clarity remains impeccable no matter the energy, volume, or tenor of the music. Spacing is even and natural; the surrounds don't carry a large portion of the music, but instead subtly support the front speakers. The track also features excellent primary and environmental sound effect elements. Action scenes deliver heavy, loud jolts that nicely recreate a few moments of chaotic, adrenaline-charged conflict, but it's in the smaller, supportive, more nuanced, background, world-shaping effects where the track shines. A cat's meow plays naturally from a distance. Gently falling rain envelops the stage with a steady, true-life cadence while light thunder gently rolls around the sides and back, both coming together in the recreation of worldly elements with sonic perfection. Indeed, all the slight little supporting ambient sounds gel with the greater whole, helping to give shape to a believable listening environment. Intruders additionally features precise, smooth, accurate, front-focused dialogue; Spanish language stretches are supported by automatic English subtitles. This is a high quality, seamless, practically faultless soundtrack from Millennium Entertainment.
Intruders contains the following three supplements:
Intruders isn't in the same league as Let Me In or other dark, terrifying children-and-monsters tales, but it's a remarkably well crafted and equally well acted picture that works through an occasionally sluggish and confused narrative and elevates the movie both on the first viewing and the critical second. Indeed, the movie demands a second watch, and proves better the second time around, for it plays better looking for nuance than it does waiting for the reveal. Juan Carlos Fresnadillo demonstrates -- again -- a fabulous eye for cinema, and his next project comes eagerly awaited. Millennium's Blu-ray release of Intruders features exceptional video and stellar audio. The supplemental package is scant, but this release nevertheless comes recommended.
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