8.9 | / 10 |
Users | 4.8 | |
Reviewer | 4.5 | |
Overall | 4.5 |
As U.S. troops storm the beaches of Normandy, three brothers lie dead on the battlefield, with a fourth trapped behind enemy lines. Captain John Miller and seven men are tasked with penetrating German-held territory and bringing the boy home.
Starring: Tom Hanks, Tom Sizemore, Edward Burns, Barry Pepper, Adam GoldbergAction | 100% |
Epic | 80% |
War | 49% |
History | 47% |
Melodrama | 31% |
Drama | 27% |
Video codec: HEVC / H.265
Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: Dolby Atmos
English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English: Dolby Digital 5.1 (640 kbps)
German: Dolby Digital 5.1 (640 kbps)
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1 (640 kbps)
French: Dolby Digital 5.1 (640 kbps)
Italian: Dolby Digital 5.1 (640 kbps)
Japanese: Dolby Digital 5.1
Portuguese: Dolby Digital 5.1
English DD 5.1 = Original audio mix. Spanish España y Latinoamérica, French Parisian, Portuguese Brasil
English, English SDH, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Spanish, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish
Blu-ray Disc
Three-disc set (3 BDs)
UV digital copy
4K Ultra HD
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 5.0 | |
Video | 5.0 | |
Audio | 5.0 | |
Extras | 3.5 | |
Overall | 4.5 |
Paramount has released Director Steven Spielberg's epic War film 'Saving Private Ryan' to the UHD format with 4K/Dolby Vision video and Dolby Atmos audio. No new extras are included, but the set does bundle the two Blu-ray discs -- movie and special features -- that released eight years ago.
The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc. Watch for 4K screenshots at a later date.
Saving Private Ryan is a very gritty movie. It's meant to appear raw, grainy, rough around the edges. And the UHD handles its complexities
masterfully. The 2160p true 4K image boasts remarkable detailing. Textures on helmets are tangibly rough. Every bit of sand is accounted for on
Normandy, and every bit of war-torn rubble in Ramelle reveals each rough edge and pebbly remnant with enough sharpness to cut the viewer,
particularly as it gets tossed about by the fight but also even as it's merely lying on the ground in a state of war-torn ruin. Grain is certainly very
pronounced and an integral part
of the viewing experience. Smoke-filled scenes do see it rise in intensity to the point of appearing more noisy, but the film's bulk does see it present
with excellent
adherence to a natural, even, well distributed field. Detailing extends beyond environments, of course,. Characters are complex, particularly
considering gritty, war-weathered faces, often under a fine layer of grime. Dust, water, and blood are often more prominent than pores, stubble, and
wrinkles, though each is handled with a very nuanced and accurate level of revelatory complexity and inherent source sharpness. There's a significant
boost in sharpness
and clarity compared to the Blu-ray, again now about eight years on the market. It still looks fairly good, but the add in definition and stability prove
critical and reveal a leap in the image's overall presentation.
The 12-bit Dolby Vision color presentation brightens the image without sacrificing its gritty, desaturated intent. Colors are a little less dour to be sure,
but the increased push certainly proves a more significant transformation to the image than does even the often striking boost in resolution. Whites are
much brighter for
one. The film's opening titles and a few cards throughout the film look comparatively dreary on Blu-ray whereas there's an unmistakable pop and
cleanliness on the UHD. It's a difficult sell on a movie like this; the denaturation, the emphasis on beiges, greens, and grays are critical to defining
mood
and atmosphere, but the Dolby Vision transformation -- it's more a transformation than it is a compliment -- brings a life to the movie that accentuates
its style rather than marginalizes or minimizes it in any way. There's a new intensity to even the rather dour palette. Clothes and helmets, beige and
green, largely, enjoy much more vitality within the film's color parameters. Take a look at a shot of Captain Miller's helmet at the 27:09 mark (which is
a great shot to showcase the increase in raw clarity and detail, too, not only the helmet's bumpy texture but also the drastic increase in facial definition
as the camera slowly zooms in on him. On the UHD, small hairs growing out of pores on his right cheek are plainly visible). It finds new boldness and
intensity to its natural color. It's very drab on the Blu-ray, but not showy or shiny on the UHD. It's just more realistically saturated without altering the
scene's emotional tone. There is a noticeable increase in brightness to fire -- several men are aflame in the movie's bookend
action scenes, and the fire's vitality is strikingly more intense on UHD. The same goes for some natural greenery seen through the film's middle stretch
as Miller and his men seek out Ryan in the French countryside.
In short, the movie leaps off the screen with its 4K/Dolby Vision presentation. It's not a fundamentally different experience, but it's a departure from
the Blu-ray, texturally to be sure with a significant add in sharpness and clarity but also in terms of color. Dolby Vision has been carefully applied to
give the image a brighter, more vibrant sheen without sacrificing the movie's core color integrity. It's very refined, more showy where it needs to be,
still bleak when it must be. It looks amazing, holds up to scrutiny with only a few inherently softer focus shots in play and a couple of scenes showing
some cracks when thick smoke and heavy grain create a mildly processed look, but overall the movie looks strikingly good on UHD.
Saving Private Ryan previously released on Blu-ray with a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack that seemed to be all the movie
needed. Enter the UHD's Dolby Atmos audio presentation, which expands the track naturally and gracefully (and also forcefully as necessary),
complimenting the presentation with a grand sense of terror, immersion, and authenticity. Waters approaching Normandy splash through the stage,
waves crash all around with fearsome force, and the top channels, while not discrete, add to the atmosphere of running watercraft engines and
splashing water drenching the men and the boat's interior. German machine guns open on disembarking Allied soldiers with frightening vigor and
intensity, ripping through the stage and, subsequently, human bodies and metal boat hulls. The gunfire is never loud for the sake of bering loud, never
over engineered for effect. Instead, there's a precision to its cadence, clarity behind every shot, and depth to each impact of striker on primer. Bullet
zip and
ricochets are terrifyingly intense. The stage transforms into the bloody beach; every inch of the theater is impacted by explosions, gunfire, and
chaos. But what's amazing isn't necessarily the primary, stage-dominant effects but rather the opportunity to hear with legitimate clarity distant cries
for ammo, shouted orders, screams for medics, and other chaotic calls as the soldiers maneuver their way through the deadly labyrinth of high velocity
lead. It's also not over engineered, as noted. Bass is prolific but never overly pronounced. Gunfire is loud but not cranked up. Each weapon's cadence is
perfectly clear, every vocalization precise -- even shouted with a hard edge -- and the general environmental din is as key a component to drawing the
listener into the film as are the visuals, which themselves convey a sense of terrifying madness.
The film's climactic battle at Ramelle offers much of the same, though the dynamics are certainly different. Piles of rubble and what's left of various
buildings create a more enclosed space. There's much more opportunity for condensed explosive dynamics and less opportunity for ricochet. Gun
thumps hit hard, whether clanking rifles or much more powerful crew-operated weapons. Tanks rumble with intensity and each with their own unique
sonic signature as they traverse the rubbly terrain. The movie's most haunting sound comes in the lead-up to the battle as German armor grows ever
closer, the sounds pushing through the streets and into the theater, signaling a foreboding battle but also creating an absolute sense of fear and dread
at the approaching enemy, which greatly outnumbers and outguns the men tasked with defending the position. With the Dolby Atmos track, those
sounds are more open, and the distant rumbles, the grinding gears, the treads rolling over debris seem to enter the stage with more clarity of fine
detail and sense of distance and space, adding to the effect of coming war. The track handles other elements beyond action very well. Music is wide and
filling, playing with exceptional fidelity across large-area stage positioning. Environmental details, like falling rain or distant pops and explosions, seem
always
perfectly positioned; no matter the place, the listener always feels certain of the sonic world around the movie. Dialogue is clear and true with natural
front-center positioning.
Saving Private Ryan contains all of its supplements on a dedicated Blu-ray disc. Another Blu-ray houses the film in 1080p. No extras are
included on the UHD disc. A UV/iTunes digital copy code is included with purchase. For a full supplemental review, please click here. For convenience, below is a list of what's included.
Saving Private Ryan is a timeless classic, and twenty years removed from its theatrical debut it's as powerful, fresh, and moving as ever. It would have been a shock and one of the biggest disappointments in home video history if its UHD was anything less than perfect. And that it is. The UHD dazzles. Nothing is fundamentally changed, but rather complimented. The Dolby Atmos track is stellar and the 2160p resolution adds a significant level of sharpness and image clarity while maintaining the movie's gritty façade. Only the Dolby Vision coloring may prove somewhat controversial, but even as it's much brighter with deeper, more expressive colors, the movie's bleak and desaturated tonal balance remains intact. It's a wonderful presentation and this set earns my highest recommendation.
Commemorative 20th Anniversary Edition
1998
Commemorative 20th Anniversary Edition
1998
2-Disc Special Edition
1998
1998
1998
1998
1998
Paramount 100th Anniversary
1998
Sapphire Series
1998
2001
2017
2001
2014
2016
2-Disc Special Edition
2006
2002
Director's Cut
2005
1962
2010
Extended Cut
2000
1977
2019
2018
2006
2012
1969
2014
2002
2003