The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D Blu-ray Movie

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The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D Blu-ray Movie United States

4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray 3D + Blu-ray + UV Digital Copy
Sony Pictures | 2016 | 97 min | Rated PG | Aug 16, 2016

The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D (Blu-ray Movie)

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List price: $11.39
Amazon: $15.19
Third party: $13.95
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Buy The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D on Blu-ray Movie

Movie rating

6.4
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users4.8 of 54.8
Reviewer4.0 of 54.0
Overall4.0 of 54.0

Overview

The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D (2016)

Find out why the birds are so angry. When an island populated by happy, flightless birds is visited by mysterious green piggies, it's up to three unlikely outcasts - Red, Chuck and Bomb - to figure out what the pigs are up to.

Starring: Jason Sudeikis, Josh Gad, Danny McBride, Maya Rudolph, Bill Hader
Director: Clay Kaytis, Fergal Reilly

Family100%
Animation91%
Comedy71%
Action45%

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: HEVC / H.265
    Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
    Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
    Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1

  • Audio

    English: Dolby Atmos
    English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
    Danish: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Estonian: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Finnish: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Latvian: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Lithuanian: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Norwegian: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Portuguese: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Russian: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Swedish: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Ukrainian: Dolby Digital 5.1 (640 kbps)
    French (Canada): Dolby Digital 5.1
    Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Cantonese: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Mandarin: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Korean: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Thai: Dolby Digital 5.1
    Vietnamese: Dolby Digital 5.1
    4K specs. 3D/2D discs have English DTS-HD MA 7.1, Portuguese DTS-HD MA 5.1, and the last 7 tracks listed here.

  • Subtitles

    English, English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Cantonese, Danish, Estonian, Finnish, Indonesian, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Mandarin (Simplified), Mandarin (Traditional), Norwegian, Russian, Swedish, Thai, Ukrainian, Vietnamese

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Three-disc set (3 BDs)
    UV digital copy
    4K Ultra HD
    Blu-ray 3D

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region free 

Review

Rating summary

Movie3.5 of 53.5
Video5.0 of 55.0
Audio5.0 of 55.0
Extras3.5 of 53.5
Overall4.0 of 54.0

The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D Blu-ray Movie Review

4K+HDR suits these colorful birds, and their pig enemies, too.

Reviewed by Martin Liebman August 16, 2016



Note: This UHD release of 'The Angry Birds Movie' also contains both the film's 1080p BD release, which houses all of the release's supplements, and a Blu-ray 3D disc, which is exclusive to this package. Reviews for both can be found by clicking their respective links above.

For the few people who are unaware, or who've forgotten about it since Pokemon Go overwhelmed the mobile game market, Angry Birds is essentially a colorful physics-based game in which players must fire an object, in this case a bird, into a structure, structures, or something dangling above or setting on or around those structures, and knock them down in order to smash targets, in this case green little pigs, in the fewest shots possible. It's a simple game of cause and effect, try and retry, and attempt to earn those coveted three stars on each level. Its popularity stems from simple touch controls (except on consoles, onto which it's made it way in several forms and fashions, which is still easy enough to play), colorful characters with a surprising depth of personality even consdering the game's relatively basic structure, and pick-up-and-play simplicity. The franchise has spawned more than new games, though. The charactes have infiltrated popular culture. There are plush toys, books, even little video shorts that expand on the world of Angry Birds. But nothing has quite taken these birds to new heights quite like Directors Clay Kaytis and Fergal Reilly's The Angry Birds Movie, a feature-length digitally animated adventure in which the birds get their first taste of pig invasion and the birds go on their first offensive against their enemies. Yes, there are slingshots and yes, the favorite birds fly through them. They talk, too, and while the film doesn't exactly reinvent the children's digital genre, it's a fun movie that works both as a standalone entertainer and a satisfying origins story for fans of the game series.

Here comes trouble! And, just maybe, a hero, too.


Red (voiced by Jason Sudeikis) has anger issues. As a young bird, his big, bushy eyebrows were a source of constant teasing. He didn't have many friends, either, and his angry, loner ways have stayed with him into adulthood. He works as a birthday clown, and when he shows up late for a hatching party -- through no fault of his own, he swears -- the hiring family's admonishing gets to him. He explodes, and his temper lands him in the worst possible place he could find himself: anger management class. There, he meets some fellow angry birds, including Chuck (voiced by Josh Gad), Terence (voiced by Sean Penn), and Bomb (voiced by Danny McBride). Things are about to change, however, when a ship sails to Bird Island. It's carrying two pigs who come bearing gifts, including the miracle of the slingshot. The birds are very accepting of their new guests and the gifts they give. But the visit doesn't sit well with red. When he's sent through the slingshot towards the pigs' ship, he investigates and discovers not just some trinkets, but an invading army. Can Red save the island, or will he and his friends have to turn to the pigs' own inventions and a long-dormant and seemingly disappeared old ally to get rid of the pigs once and for all?

The Angry Birds Movie delivers a nice little diversion for audiences looking for such. The movie works well enough as a standalone film, playing both as an introduction to the video game series as well as a fine little Adventure film about anger outlets, refusing to be blinded by promise and allure (particularly from strangers), the power of belief, and the noble fight to return property from thieves. Of course, the themes aren't front-and-center. They're mostly plot facilitators that allow colorful characters to engage in all sorts of cute shenanigans, appear in cuddly poses, and in the third act, dish out some pain, Angry Birds style. Yup, there's a slingshot, but the movie isn't just tossing birds at buildings and pigs. It all works together, yielding a tidy enough little story, the vast majority of which doesn't involve any sort of video game reproduction. It works well on its own merits, more capitalizing on the name and characters and less the game's mechanics. Good thing, too, because would anyone really want to watch birds flung across the screen for ninety minutes? That's what makes the game fun: its compact levels and quick pick-up and put-down playability. Not exactly he kind of stuff movies are made of. But the filmmakers have integrated it all very well, albeit in small spurts, nonetheless.

Technically, the movie impresses. It's robust and healthy, abundantly colorful and polished to a level one would expect of a digital feature from 2016. Every feather, environmental detail, nook, and cranny is resplendently presented. The world is limited in scope but very much alive, and the mix of natural environments with silly and fun unique touches make it a pleasure to explore in most every frame, both the bird world and the pig world alike. Voice performances are fine and lend to the birds (and pigs) a believable cadence that easily identifies character qualities established in the film and the known quantities from the game, too. The movie is not without a few issues, though. Chief amongst them is pacing, which can be sluggish, particularly early on as character introductions tend to gnaw rather than develop fluidly. Some of the flashbacks to Red's youth are appreciated, and the "angry" monicker is explored to satisfaction: he's picked on for his eyebrows, his belief in the Eagle, and lack of friends. "Anger" plays central to the plot, gets the characters together, and allows Red to see the pigs from a different perspective than everyone else. For the duration, material feels a bit too stretched and there's not much of a dramatic payoff. It all plays out rather expectedly, but more often than not, and as the case always seems to be with most animated features not bearing the word "Pixar," the colors and fun factor prove enough to get the viewer through the movie without often losing that smile from the face.


The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  5.0 of 5

The Angry Birds Movie looked fantastic on 1080p Blu-ray: jaw-dropping colors and excellent digital detail. Just looking at that disc, it seemed a tall order to improve on it. Sony's UHD does just that. It's not a huge upgrade -- it's the same movie, the same animation, the same colors, or more less, even with the HDR coloring -- but the image is clearly finer, more revealing, and even a little bit punchier when it comes to its already lavish colors. Indeed, the palette appears a bit more full and refined. There's more subtle nuance to shade changes, more vitality to bird feathers, be they red, yellow, or particularly blue. This is one of the most diverse, alive, and spellbinding color palettes ever to grace a home theater screen, hands down. Detail is the colors' match. The 1080p disc certainly looked sharp, but the UHD offers a subtle refinement that allows for improved texturing, clarity of layered objects (like feathers), and intimate clarity on feathers, terrain, odds and ends around the pig pirate ship or bird island, the Mighty Falcon's wet and rocky home, and even pig hide where minute detailing and fine fur is much more readily apparent than it is on basic Blu-ray. The UHD improves on both key areas of concern. Of course, the image maintains a crisp, clean, and robust surface. No digital flaws -- not even a hint of aliasing, banding, or other troublesome eyesores -- are evident. This is first-class UHD material from Sony.


The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  5.0 of 5

The Angry Birds Movie soars onto UHD with a first-rate Dolby Atmos soundtrack. The track takes all that's great about the regular Blu-ray's DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 lossless soundtrack and adds a few key overhead elements and some positive support details by way of the added height channels to improve upon an already stellar listen. This review is based on an 11.1 setup, adding four "height" channels to the traditional 7.1 configuration. Essentially, the nuts-and-bolts basics are very similar. The film's wide range of music remains a highlight, with sharp, well defined instrumentals and lyrics in every song, regardless of style. Spacing is superb, and the songs spread through the stage and wrap around the back for a seamless and impressively immersive surround sensation. Action effects remain a highlight, with explosions and zipping and flying chaos, particularly at the end but also a bit earlier when the pigs make off with the eggs. Explosions are healthily deep, not too potent but satisfying in depth and delivery. The same can be said of Terrence's bellows and grunts that play with a subwoofer-engaging heft. Many of the Atmos-specific highlights come in the way of scenes featuring the Mighty Eagle. His moaning and growls as he's first introduced, echoing through his cavernous lair, create a fair overhead sensation as the sound pushes through the stage. His not-so-heroic but certainly helpful entrance into the battle near film's end also offers what is probably the single most effective overhead moment as he drops in from above. Other key moments include, again, that battle when the pigs steal the eggs, yielding a more generalized but obvious height sensation. Red's slow-motion fall onto an egg in the film's opening minutes is another. The track is very fun all around, and the Atmos presentation only enhances it. Rounded into form by clear and center-focused dialogue, this is a top-flight listen that's one of the most enjoyable in the growing library of Atmos-enabled discs.


The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  3.5 of 5

This UHD release of The Angry Birds Movie contains all of its supplements on the 1080p Blu-ray disc, with the exception of the "Symphony Mode" option, which is available on both. The UHD does contain a unique collection of "Moments" (2160p, Atmos sound), which are montages featuring several segments and characters from the film. Included are Angry! (9:03), Thieving (10:38), Pigs (5:27), and Hatchlings (11:45). Also included is a "Photo Gallery" tab that offers a look at Characters, Piggy Island, and Bird Island. A UV digital copy code is included with purchase. As noted above, the 1080p Blu-ray and the Blu-ray 3D discs are included. No DVD copy is included. Below is a list of the supplements included on the 1080p disc.

  • Hatchlings! (1080p): A selection of shorts from the Angry Birds universe. Included are:
    • Early Hatchling Gets the Worm (2:06): Birds and worms can be friends!
    • Easter (1:17): The Hatchlings talk (and sing) up one of their favorite holidays.
    • Mother's Day (1:00): Little birds talk about why they love their mother.
    • Holiday (1:02): Fa-la-la-la-la! Merry Christmas from the Hatchlings!
    • Meet the Hatchlings (4:11): The longest piece, by far, is not a standalone short but rather a supplement that looks at the importance of the Hatchlings in the movie.

  • Angry Birds Action! How to Sync (1080p, 1:08): An ad for the new game, and instructions on how to play in conjunction with the movie.
  • Deleted Scenes (1080p): Bonus Scene - Chuck's Rescue (0:26), Happy Birthday! (0:52), Red's Apology (1:19), Coconut Story (1:15), Whoopie Cushion (1:32), and Mighty Eagle (1:06).
  • Dance Along Birds and Pigs (1080p, 3:35): A cowgirl and animated characters dance to music from the film.
  • Crafty Birds (1080p, 4:45): Learn how to make a physical Angry Birds game out of common household items.
  • Creating the Real World of Angry Birds (1080p, 8:29): Josh Gad and Jason Sudeikis introduce what is, essentially, a basic making-of overview that covers the challenges of making the movie, evolving the game into a film, creating environments and characters, digital construction, and more.
  • Bubbles and Hal (1080p, 1:35): Bubbles proves he's the angriest! But does he want to be angry?
  • Meet the Birds (1080p, 10:26): An introduction to several primary avian characters with interviews featuring voice cast and crew. The piece includes a look at digital design animation and voice acting.
  • Meet the Pigs (1080p, 5:05): Similar to the previous supplement, this time focusing on the villainous pigs.
  • Music Video (1080p, 3:04): "Friends" by Blake Shelton.
  • Making Music with Composer Heitor Pereira (1080p): The composer discusses the creation of several of the film's musical selections, shows off some unique instruments in Pig's Theme, and performs some of the music (solo and orchestral). Included are Red's Theme (2:42), Pig's Theme (1:50), Chuck's Theme (1:22), Action Music! (2:03), Mission Theme (1:42), and Red's Anger Theme (0:49). This is a very fun supplement; Pereira is a fine host and musician.
  • Photo Gallery (1080p): A selection of three still image galleries, each available as an automatic slideshow or individual image selection and display. Included are Characters, Piggy Island, and Bird Island.
  • In-Theater Policy Trailers (1080p): The birds go to the movies! Included shorts are as follows: A Gift Card for Chuck (1:00), Join Your Friends (1:10), and Silence Your Birdphone (0:48).
  • Symphony Mode (1080p, 1:37:13): From the menu: "Watch Angry Birds without all the squawks and oinks with symphony mode!" Essentially, an isolated score.
  • Scene Selections: Pick a scene. Any scene.
  • Previews (1080p): Additional Sony titles.


The Angry Birds Movie 4K + 3D Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  4.0 of 5

The Angry Birds Movie boils down to the usual animated fare qualities: there's lots of humor, color, action, and adventure in a relatively safe environment and presentation. There's really no substance-- this isn't Pixar -- but it's a fun little diversion that should satisfy younger audiences, those familiar with the game or not, while both adults and Angry Birds game veterans might find it appealing if only to see their favorite characters in a real adventure that does a fair, if not sometimes sluggish, job of gradually building them and constructing a story towards the (fairly brief) implementation of game mechanics on a much large scale than a phone screen. Sony's 4K UHD/HDR release of The Angry Birds Movie features stunning video that subtly improves on the Blu-ray. Atmos audio is excellent with several positive overhead effects and generalized support alike. The supplemental section (on the included 1080p disc) is long, though not particularly deep. Highly recommended to UHD owners and, of course, those who want to view the movie in 3D.