5.7 | / 10 |
Users | 0.0 | |
Reviewer | 4.0 | |
Overall | 4.0 |
After the highs of winning the World Championships, the Bellas find themselves split apart and discovering there aren't job prospects for making music with your mouth. But when they get the chance to reunite for an overseas USO tour, this group of awesome nerds will come together to make some music, and some questionable decisions, one last time.
Starring: Anna Kendrick, Hailee Steinfeld, Elizabeth Banks, Brittany Snow, Rebel WilsonComedy | 100% |
Teen | 38% |
Romance | 37% |
Music | 17% |
Drama | Insignificant |
Video codec: HEVC / H.265
Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: DTS:X
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
French (Canada): DTS 5.1
Spanish: DTS-HD HR 7.1
English SDH, French, Spanish
Blu-ray Disc
Two-disc set (2 BDs)
Digital copy
4K Ultra HD
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 3.0 | |
Video | 4.0 | |
Audio | 5.0 | |
Extras | 3.5 | |
Overall | 4.0 |
With a tagline like "Last Call, Pitches," it's not difficult to decipher the sort of tone Pitch Perfect 3 is aiming for and that has been pre-established in the franchise's previous two entries. These movies are the song-and-dance genre's equivalent to the Action movie world's big-and-dumb flicks. There's no meat on the bones; the series, and this third entry in particular, is all about the externalities, the competitions and the performances. Everything else, no matter how hard the writers may try, is ancillary. Sure there are enough threads running through the series and exclusive to this film that fans will enjoy watching various maturations, pitfalls, and recoveries -- particularly as they deal with the three main focal characters in Beca, Fat Amy, and Chloe -- but beyond exactly how and why things happen, the film leaves little to the imagination. It's structurally stale and safe, injecting various trials that test the Bellas both collectively and, for the leads, individually. Will it all work out in the end? Well, duh, but the joy comes in getting there, in enjoying the movie's infectious beats, and standing up to dance and cheer in a fitting final performance that, on Blu-ray, is also a sonic work of art and the perfect way to send the girls off into he proverbial sunset.
Solo Bella.
The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc. Watch for 4K screenshots at a later date.
Pitch Perfect 3's UHD may be an upscale from a 2K digital intermediate (with the film reportedly shot at a resolution of 2.8K), but it's nevertheless a
satisfying upgrade over the Blu-ray. Improvements to detail are clear right off the bat when viewing the film in close proximity to the Blu-ray.
Sharpness
takes a fairly large step forward. Image crispness and clarity receive an obvious boost, and the picture enjoys the fruits of the added resolution in
terms of bringing out extremely fine facial and clothing textures, which in comparison leaves the Blu-ray looking almost smooth and flat. While
detailing
takes a stout step forward over the Blu-ray, the leap in color is significant. The HDR-enhanced presentation is the unequivocal image highlight. Colors
boast a serious increase in saturation, nuance, and vitality. Take a look at a direct overhead shot of blue umbrellas in the 53-minute mark. The sheer
vitality is absolutely striking, and on a direct compare to the Blu-ray, the improvements take on even more significance; the Blu-ray, itself very vibrant
and robust in a vacuum, appears dull in comparison. Bright lighting effects during the final performance shine with incredible intensity, particularly
against a darker
backdrop. Skin tones enjoy heightened depth and accuracy with nuanced diversity of both natural tones and applied makeup. Various clothes and
interior paint colors dazzle. Black levels are superb, too. While Pitch Perfect 3 enjoys a nice textural boost in 2160p, it's the HDR colors that
really make this disc shine; UHD fans will want to pick this one up as a format showcase, particularly for an upscale presentation.
Pitch Perfect 3 features the same DTS:X Master Audio soundtrack that can be found on the companion Blu-ray release; kudos to Universal for continuing to support both formats with the best audio experience. The presentation doesn't disappoint. The opening a cappella take on the Universal theme music is sonically interesting and enjoyably rich, presenting with plenty of discrete effects all over the stage and featuring fluid, effortlessly clear and highly detailed notes. The resultant unique listening experience is only the first of several sonic highlights in the film. Various musical performances follow suit, all with some degree of seamless and precise stage location and easy, well defined movements resulting in total and accurate surround integration. The culmination arrives in the film's (and the series') finale. A large, enveloping performance, beginning with Beca and eventually including all of the girls, offers fine-tuned instrumental clarity and, yes, pitch perfect lyrical definition. It's a sensational sonic moment. The sense of total integration; the fine-point, sweet and smooth sound transitions; and the effortlessly integrated overhead support make for one of the most enjoyably fluid and perfectly immersive moments one if going to find. Add in a low end that hits, and remains in, a sweet spot of authoritative yet complimentary refinement that melts into the experience rather than dominating it, and it's easily a reference sonic moment that DTS should be promoting as one of its best. Various support elements -- whether background din at a military base or an overpowering jet engine that comically drowns out dialogue -- offer exceptional performance. There's some wonderful microphone reverb and a sense of large, cavernous space during some concert scenes throughout the movie's middle stretch, and the top end enjoys more discrete prominence at the 64-minute mark when metallic sounds roll around the stage. Dialogue is clear and precise and perfectly positioned throughout. This is a fantastic sound presentation from DTS and Universal.
Pitch Perfect 3 contains ample supplements on the bundled Blu-ray disc, including a pair of audio commentary tracks (which do carry over to
the UHD disc). A Movies Anywhere
digital copy code is included with purchase.
In Pitch Perfect 3, most of the Bellas fade into the background. One has a baby and the others express their wishes for when their career together ultimately comes to an end, but the movie doesn't really strive to offer any significant final word for them, at least off the stage. It ends on a perfectly executed number that's an aesthetic joy and, really, the best possible ending considering the relative dearth of anything else of real significance in a franchise that doesn't push too many boundaries, either dramatically or considering over-the-top crude humor. This film, and the two before it, are merely pleasant escapes, which seems to be the case with so many movies these days. Pitch Perfect 3 does its thing very well. The actors are fine in the roles, the dance and song routines are enjoyable, and there's enough of an essential framework narrative construct to keep things moving in between numbers. In essence, Pitch Perfect 3 is the perfect send-off, never straying from the formula but rather fine-tuning it as it moves towards a heartfelt and highly enjoyable final routine. Universal's UHD is excellent, stuffed with extra content and boasting an HDR highlight reel 2160p video transfer and reference DTS:X Master Audio sound. Recommended, and don't forget that the first two films have received UHD upgrades.
2015
2012
American Pie 3 | Unrated + Theatrical
2003
2018
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Special Edition
2002
Special Edition | MVD Marquee Collection
2004
1991
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Sing-Along Edition
2018
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