6.4 | / 10 |
Users | 0.0 | |
Reviewer | 3.5 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
While vacationing at a remote cabin, a young girl and her parents are taken hostage by four armed strangers who demand that the family make an unthinkable choice to avert the apocalypse. With limited access to the outside world, the family must decide what they believe before all is lost.
Starring: Dave Bautista, Jonathan Groff (II), Ben Aldridge, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Rupert GrintHorror | 100% |
Mystery | 5% |
Thriller | Insignificant |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: Dolby Atmos
English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
French: Dolby Digital 5.1
English SDH, French, Spanish
Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
Digital copy
DVD copy
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A, B (C untested)
Movie | 2.5 | |
Video | 5.0 | |
Audio | 4.5 | |
Extras | 2.5 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
To call M. Night Shyamalan's career "chaotic" might be an understatement. After a flurry of early success with The Sixth Sense, Unbreakable, and Signs, the director's career has since spanned decades and spawned a plethora of iffy films that have never lived up to the excellence of his early career masterpieces. With Knock at the Cabin, Shyamalan attempts to recapture the glory days of his directorial youth with a film adapted from the apocalyptic novel The Cabin at the End of the World by Paul G. Tremblay. The film flirts with some of the best ideas in Shyamalan's career, but the picture fails to resonate, falling flat with less than convincing story lines, characters, and performances. An intriguing premise awaits, but flawed execution prevents the film from capturing the essential essence of horror and hopelessness its material desperately wishes to engender in its audiences.
The 1080p picture quality for the Blu-ray release of Knock at the Cabin is stellar. The source is pristine and clean, and the result is a high yield image that offers razor-sharp textures and superb clarity in all areas, whether inside the cabin or outside, mostly under the sun. The level of intricate clarity to faces is first-rate, with viewers able to examine every fine pore and hair element with effortless ease. Enviornmental sharpness and definition are top of the class, too, offering substantial definition to book spines and hardwood floors in the cabin, for example, and natural elements outside as well. Color saturation is excellent. Blood red really pops, clothing tones are bold ad balanced, skin tones are accurate, black levels are deep, and whites are very crisp, especially some of the white head coverings seen in a couple of spots in the film. There are no compression issues to report, either. This is a primo new release Blu-ray from Universal.
Universal delivers Knock at the Cabin to Blu-ray and UHD alike with a Dolby Atmos soundtrack. The film's sound design is not prolific, taking place in an enclosed, largely quiet environment inside the cabin where dialogue is the primary audio component. Spoken word clarity is fine, with the broad range of vocal inflections and volume handled quite nicely with firmly grounded front-center positioning throughout. Some support elements are nicely defined as well. The Atmos track proves excellent from the opening moments where woodland insect sounds and various atmospheric cues effortlessly drop the listener into the location with full surround content and lifelike definition. This is one of the high points for total immersion; the track has few other opportunities for this level of layered envelopment, but it does deal in all cues with satisfying balance, spacing, and clarity. Some depth is present across a few areas of need, to speak of which would spoil some of the movie's surprises, but rest assured that depth and power are present as necessary. This is not the most potent or prolific track ever presented because of the somewhat more reserved nature of the original audio engineering and the film's core audio needs, but listeners can rest assured that what is here is clear and faithful to original content.
This Blu-ray release of Knock at the Cabin contains a handful of bonus features. A DVD copy of the film and a Movies Anywhere digital copy
code are included with purchase. This release ships with an embossed slipcover.
Knock at the Cabin is certainly neither a poor picture nor the worst in the Shyamalan canon, but it is one of the most frustrating pictures in the Shyamalan canon. Packed with potential, opportunity for rich subtext, extreme human emotion and duress, and significant drama, the film feels cold and distant with little sense of the very real enormity playing out as a result of what's happening in the isolated cabin. That seems to be so much of today's movie landscape: so much potential, so little excellence. Universal's Blu-ray, however, is excellent, offering tip-top video and audio presentations. A few extras are included. Recommended for fans.
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