Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Blu-ray Movie

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Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Blu-ray Movie United States

Blu-ray + DVD + Digital Copy
Sony Pictures | 2019 | 161 min | Rated R | Dec 10, 2019

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (Blu-ray Movie)

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Movie rating

8.1
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users4.4 of 54.4
Reviewer4.0 of 54.0
Overall4.0 of 54.0

Overview

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (2019)

A story that takes place in Los Angeles in 1969, at the height of hippy Hollywood. The two lead characters are Rick Dalton, former star of a western TV series, and his longtime stunt double Cliff Booth. Both are struggling to make it in a Hollywood they don’t recognize anymore. But Rick has a new next-door neighbor, who may be a rising star…Sharon Tate.

Starring: Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie, Emile Hirsch, Margaret Qualley
Narrator: Kurt Russell
Director: Quentin Tarantino

Dark humor100%
Drama88%
Period66%
Thriller46%
ComedyInsignificant

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 2.40:1
    Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
    French (Canada): Dolby Digital 5.1
    Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1 (640 kbps)

  • Subtitles

    English, English SDH, French, Spanish

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
    Digital copy
    DVD copy

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region free 

Review

Rating summary

Movie4.0 of 54.0
Video5.0 of 55.0
Audio4.5 of 54.5
Extras2.5 of 52.5
Overall4.0 of 54.0

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Blu-ray Movie Review

This is the end, beautiful friend.

Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman December 11, 2019

Perhaps understandably some social historians may argue that the culmination of 1967’s so-called Summer of Love took place during the summer of two years later, with Woodstock: 3 Days of Peace & Music, but Woodstock itself took place in the pretty immediate wake of such a shocking event that it seemed to almost instantly deflate whatever “flower power” the hippie movement had sought to engender. It’s kind of amazing in a way to think that the infamous and horrifying Manson Family murders of Sharon Tate and several of her friends, and then a night later, of Leno and Rosemary LaBianca, took place on August 8 and 9, 1969, a mere week or so before Woodstock tried desperately to remind people about such evanescent phenomena as “peace” and “music”.


Quentin Tarantino, having “rewritten” the arguably an even more epochal tragedy than the Tate murders -- namely World War II -- in Inglourious Basterds (a rejiggering more or less revisited in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood*), now turns his sights to the awful fate which awaited Sharon Tate (Margot Robbie), Jay Sebring (Emile Hirsch), Abigail Folger (Samantha Robinson) and Wojciech Frykowski (Costa Ronin) on the evening of August 8, 1969, but he does so through the prism of the relationship between aging western star Rick Dalton (Leonardo DiCaprio) and Dalton’s erstwhile stunt double Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt). For those who are concerned the film is moving inexorably toward a gruesome set piece detailing the horrifying Manson Family killings, suffice it to say Tarantino, as seems to be his wont, completely recasts (no pun intended) everything, which may in fact be the biggest issue some fans may have with this enterprise, even if they’re otherwise entranced by Tarantino’s kind of cheeky sendup of late sixties Hollywood life.

There’s a novelistic approach to things in this film, though it’s debatable whether some of the subplots are really developed very fully. Tarantino indulges in the cinematic equivalent of ADHD at times, darting off into flashbacks or other ephemera while attempting to detail the downward spiral of Dalton, a once promising western series star (snippets from the series, Bounty Law, are offered) who has, in true television star fashion, shot himself in the foot by attempting to eschew the small screen for movie stardom, something that has evidently failed spectacularly, leaving him consigned to guest star roles on various series (usually playing the bad guy). There’s a longish vignette woven throughout the film detailing Dalton’s trials and tribulations on a little remembered but actually real life western that ran on CBS for a couple of years, Lancer, in just another indication of Tarantino’s love for some picayune nooks and crannies of pop culture.

It turns out that Dalton lives next door to Roman Polanski (Rafal Zawierucha) and Tate, and Tarantino frequently just kind of drifts over to that house to detail the goings on there, while dropping copious hints about the tangled relationship between Polanski, Tate and Sebring. The Manson Family does in fact show up on the sidelines here, courtesy of a couple of artifices which are at least partially based in fact. Manson (Damon Herriman) shows up one day to the surprise of Sebring and Tate, on the hunt for his supposed friend Terry Melcher, in one of the film’s kind of creepy moments of what turns out to be needless foreboding. But there’s more content given over to some exploits of Cliff, who ends up interacting with some of the Family at the now infamous Spahn Ranch, which Tarantino posits as one of the filming locations for the cancelled Bounty Law.

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is stuffed to the gills with little Tarantino-esque “alternate reality” flourishes with regard to “real life” characters wandering in and out of the story. Some of them, like the subplot involving Sam Wanamaker (Nicholas Hammond), are basically harmless, while others, including a vignette involving Bruce Lee (Mike Moh), have raised some pretty serious hackles in certain fans. The biggest “pretend” element here, though, is about the Manson Family and Sharon Tate (and cohorts), and it’s hard to really completely justify Tarantino’s decision to discard such visceral horror for something that plays almost like a live action Chuck Jones cartoon. Hollywood of course has long thrived on happy endings, but in this particular case, that tradition seems kind of oddly ill suited to the actual facts.

Still, the film is relentlessly entertaining, and it features a really stellar array of performers throughout. Production design is superb as well, detailing everything from the mammoth muscle cars of the period to some of the “mod” outfits movers and shakers in Los Angeles were fond of wearing. The film has a kind of loosey-goosey ambience which may stand in the way of a fully realized narrative, but it manages to convey some hard truths about the vagaries of a life in show business, even if it unabashedly ignores some facts in the process.

*There's a kind of funny sidebar here when Dalton is chatting with an agent (played memorably by Al Pacino), and the agent refers to a World War II film that Dalton had made. A brief scene from the film then takes over, and it is more than a bit reminiscent of a moment in Inglourious Basterds, no doubt intentionally.


Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  5.0 of 5

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Sony Pictures Home Entertainment with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 2.40:1. Shot on film (though in a variety of formats, as small as 8 mm and 16 mm, according to the IMDb), and then finished at a 4K DI (again according to the IMDb), this is a stellar looking transfer all the way around. There are some kind of curious grading choices Tarantino and cinematographer Robert Richardson have employed, including a surplus of yellow toning in several sequences, but fine detail levels remain remarkably intact despite rather wide variances in lighting and grading. Sharpness and clarity are often really excellent, with nice, precise renderings of some tricky elements like the screen door seen in screenshot 8). The palette is frequently very warm and inviting, especially in some of the sun drenched outdoor material. Fine detail on elements like the little tufts on the sweater Wanamaker wears in a makeup trailer where Dalton is desperately trying to sober up also look incredibly well textured. Grain resolves naturally throughout the presentation and I noticed no compression anomalies of any kind.


Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  4.5 of 5

Once Upon a Time in Hollywood features another grab bag of juke box material and as such provides a lot of surround opportunity for the disc's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track. A glut of outdoor scenes also provide excellent opportunities for well placed ambient environmental sounds. There are several scenes where crowds are in attendance (a party at the Playboy Mansion is a notable example), where the spill of background noise wafts through the side and rear channels quite invitingly. Dialogue is rendered cleanly and clearly throughout this problem free track.


Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  2.5 of 5

  • Additional Scenes (1080p; 25:01)

  • Quentin Tarantino's Love Letter to Hollywood (1080p; 5:00) is a brief EPK with some interviews and fun behind the scenes footage.

  • Bob Richardson - For the Love of Film (1080p; 4:34) focuses (sorry) on the film's cinematographer.

  • Shop Talk - The Cars of 1969 (1080p; 5:58) is an engaging look at the vintage vehicles in the film. It's really fun to see how they outfitted some of these for the "POV" shots.

  • Restoring Hollywood -- The Production Design of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (1080p; 9:18) features Barbara Ling's excellent work on the film.

  • The Fashion of 1969 (1080p; 6:37) centers on Arianne Phillips' equally adept costuming for the film.


Once Upon a Time in Hollywood Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  4.0 of 5

I frankly can't tell you exactly why I feel this way, but for some reason Tarantino's "revisionist" proclivities struck me as much more disrespectful in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood than they did in Inglourious Basterds. That may be because the appalling murders that took place on August 8, 1969 were so personal in a way that discarding the truth of what happened seems downright churlish. If you can get past that (and, at least for Bruce Lee fans, one other vignette), Once Upon a Time in Hollywood is vastly entertaining and it offers some of the most expert production design recreating a specific era that I've seen recently. Performances are top notch all the way around, even when the material doesn't give the actors that much to work with. Technical merits are first rate and the supplemental package very enjoyable. Recommended.