6.8 | / 10 |
Users | 3.0 | |
Reviewer | 2.5 | |
Overall | 2.9 |
After the civil war, a man searches for the man who was responsible for the death of his friend and most of his army unit.
Starring: John Wayne, Jorge Rivero, Jennifer O'Neill, Jack Elam, Christopher MitchumWestern | 100% |
War | 46% |
Romance | 18% |
Adventure | Insignificant |
Video codec: VC-1
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0
Spanish: DTS-HD Master Audio Mono
German: DTS-HD Master Audio Mono
French: DTS-HD Master Audio Mono
English SDH, French, German, Spanish, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish
50GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Region free
Movie | 2.5 | |
Video | 2.5 | |
Audio | 3.5 | |
Extras | 0.0 | |
Overall | 2.5 |
I'm going to kill him someday.
With so many Westerns and a great number of them starring the legendary John Wayne, one can easily surmise that not every project was necessarily
one that held the promise to outdo those that came before it. Any genre, any actor, any director reaches a breaking point where diminishing points of
return cross that line that separates success and failure. Rio Lobo crosses that line and settles onto the wrong side, but only barely so. A
completely tangential picture that's more or less a rehash of two previous John Wayne/Howard Hawks pictures -- Rio Bravo and El
Dorado -- Rio Lobo is a disappointing and unnecessary film that sees all involved either on cruise control or unable to elevate their efforts
to a point that the picture can achieve anything better than basic respectability. Subpar acting, an unoriginal premise, and a general sense of fatigue
hang over the picture and degrade it to the point that there's nothing left to overcome the repetitive nature of the plot. The movie looks good and
generally holds audience interest, but it does move along more or less as an indistinguishable blur with every scene, character, setting, and line of
dialogue all feeling recycled and rehashed for no particular reason, other than to get one more John Wayne picture on the marketplace, and a dull one
at that.
I shall avenge you!
Rio Lobo isn't quite as crisp and satisfying as one would expect of a Paramount catalogue Blu-ray title. The studio has seemingly slapped a dated and slightly tattered HD master onto Blu-ray, and the results are less than striking. The image holds up reasonably well, but never demonstrates more than basic competency in any area of concern. The film opens with some terribly heavy wobble and features some lingering debris over the opening title sequence; the former disappears as the movie gets underway, but the latter remains throughout, with pops, scratches, stains, and stray lines sometimes appearing in such bulk as to be a distraction from the movie. Colors are slightly faded, not bad looking but not at all vibrant, with weak greens, uninspired blues, and dusty earth tones that are bland even for shades of tan. Detail is the transfer's best asset, and even that is sometimes shaky. The 1080p resolution will allow for greater crispness and stability on larger displays, but even then detailing is merely adequate, with seams on a train, the worn wooden lines on a restaurant table, natural vegetation, and facial and clothing textures all ranging from fair-to-good, never dropping to "poor" but never ascending to "excellent." Blacks are fair, with both day-for-night and night-for-night shots holding up equally well. There are a handful of blocky backgrounds and poor color gradations, neither of which are major causes for concern. Film grain is light at best and seemingly scrubbed away at worst, but never, it seems, to the detriment of fine detailing. Rio Lobo could certainly use a once-over, if not a full-blown restoration. As it is, this transfer's primary asset will be its stability on larger displays.
Rio Lobo's DTS-HD MA 5.1 lossless soundtrack fares somewhat better than its 1080p video counterpart. The picture opens with guitar strums that are satisfactorily airy and crisp, with music in general enjoying an effortless flow and nice spacing across the front. While lacking in absolute clarity and seamlessness, the overall presentation is quite good. However, the "5.1" monicker sometimes seems as if it is just for show. For as many surround elements as there may be, there's an equal number of instances where the material seems unnaturally confined to the front. Ambient effects in particular are limited in both range and space, but a moving train -- as somewhat puny and absent of real energy as it may seem -- does manage to rumble right through the listening areal. A gunfight at the end of the film also demonstrates some vigor and clarity. Dialogue is generally crisp and accurate as it stays grounded in the center channel. This is by no means a revealing or all-time great soundtrack, but for the most part it certainly suffices and then some.
Rio Lobo features no extras.
Rio Lobo doesn't excel as a genre-defining picture, nor does it really disappoint to the level of becoming unwatchable. It's a far lesser picture than viewers might rightly expect from a Howard Hawks/John Wayne collaboration, but it's still vastly superior to bottom-scraping genre pictures. Poor acting and a rehashed story are the two primary culprits here. The film starts and ends well, but the sluggish middle section will likely lose a lot of viewers before the exciting concluding shootout. Unfortunately, Rio Lobo will be best -- and maybe really only -- remembered as the final picture in legendary Director Howard Hawks's career. Paramount's Blu-ray release of Rio Lobo delivers a decent 1080p transfer seemingly sourced from an older master, a fair lossless soundtrack, and no extras. Fans should be just pleased enough given they find the disc on a good sale. Otherwise, best to just give this one a rent.
1971
1966
1959
Limited Edition
1965
For a Few Extra Dollars / Die Now, Pay Later / Per pochi dollari ancora
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1954
Warner Archive Collection
1962
Warner Archive Collection
1955
Limited Edition to 3000
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Limited Edition to 3000
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Warner Archive Collection
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