6 | / 10 |
Users | 3.9 | |
Reviewer | 4.0 | |
Overall | 4.0 |
Following the death of his father, Britt Reid, heir to his father's large company, teams up with his late dad's assistant Kato to become a masked crime fighting team.
Starring: Seth Rogen, Jay Chou, Cameron Diaz, Tom Wilkinson, Christoph WaltzAction | 100% |
Comic book | 43% |
Comedy | 26% |
Martial arts | 14% |
Crime | 7% |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.40:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 16-bit)
French: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 16-bit)
Portuguese: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48 kHz, 16-bit)
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
English, English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish
50GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
BD-Live
movieIQ
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 4.0 | |
Video | 4.5 | |
Audio | 4.5 | |
Extras | 3.5 | |
Overall | 4.0 |
You're a human swiss army knife!
Take James Bond, slap on the Lone Ranger's eye mask, ditch Q, pick up a cool Asian sidekick, drop 20 years, add 20 pounds, and the end result would
be someone like The Green Hornet. That name doesn't really have the same ring to it as The Green Lantern or The Green Goblin or
Green Peace or an OD Green Piece or Going Green or Green With Envy or Greenbacks; OK, maybe it does, but whatever, it's cool. Here he is,
finally in his own
honest-to-gosh movie, a few years late to the party, a couple of dollars short, and a happy meal or two too many, but it's finally the Hornet's turn to
sting, to buuuuuzzzzzzzz audiences and prove that a superhero doesn't have to have a man at the end of his name, man, to be
coooool. And sure enough, this ain't your older brother's mid-2000s superhero movie, either. Nope, this is something a little more
unique, maybe, a movie that's not so much about crime fighting or such exciting nonsense but about relationships, real
relationships, the kind born from a chance meeting and that instant spark, a chemistry that seems almost like fate but that really just happens to
all come back to a really good cup of Joe. With a leaf in it. Who was it that said coffe can't save the day? Because they were
wrong. Dead wrong. Because The Green Hornet's gonna getcha! Gee whiz, too much caffeine, maybe? Or is The Green
Hornet really this much fun?
Heroes on the hunt.
The Green Hornet rides onto Blu-ray and brings with him a handsome, sturdy, film-like 1080p Blu-ray transfer. The image occasionally struggles through some softness but is otherwise as solid as Kato's indestructible cars. This is a spectacular, effortlessly crisp, crystal-clear image that's impressively -- but not perfectly -- detailed from top to bottom and front to back. Nothing in the movie is so finely detailed that it stands out as brilliantly eye-catching, but it's the stability and consistency that makes The Green Hornet look so good. The film isn't exactly the most colorful out there; for every bright daylight scene there are plenty of nighttime or otherwise low-light shots that obscure some of the natural color, but the transfer does manage to reveal wonderfully deep blacks that perfectly accentuate every dark shot. A light layer of grain gives the image a polished, finished appearance. There's not a hint of print damage or unwanted compression artifacts. All in all another striking winner of a transfer from Sony.
The Green Hornet's dazzling DTS-HD MA 5.1 lossless soundtrack is every bit as good as the material suggests it would be. Lots of directional activity, abundantly clear music and effects, and a hefty low end all make this track a first-class winner. Deep, rumbly, but tight bass blasts into the soundstage as things blow up with some regularity throughout the movie, the effects supported by the remaining speakers through which various objects become tossed and strewn hither and thither with great realistic effect, completing the sensation of the explosions and putting the listener in the middle of the action. Indeed, every speaker is active and ready for action with every scene; gunfire tears through the soundstage with heavy, devastating authority in chapter thirteen (and in a few other places), while the entire soundstage carries various action and ambient atmospherics alike with remarkable precision. Music is crisp and effortlessly energetic, retaining a lifelike vitality and seamless spacing that's evident in every note. Lastly, dialogue reproduction is smooth, crisp, and always center-focused. The Green Hornet is another Action movie sonic marvel from Sony.
The Green Hornet features a nice assortment of extra goodies, headlined by several featurettes and an audio commentary track.
The Green Hornet is a pleasant surprise. It falls under the "Superhero" umbrella but plays more like a Buddy Comedy. Not in the least bit thematically dark; maybe a little sloppy around the scripted edges; and featuring a lame-o villain who, in his defense, is really just a generic stand-in that gives the plot a counterpoint against whom the heroes must battle, The Green Hornet works in spite of its shortcomings thanks to excellent casting and spot-on performances from its chemistry-laden leads. The Green Hornet is best enjoyed as a laid-back brainless romp that's more about loud action, witty dialogue, and lots of punch-counterpunch antics. As a pure Superhero movie in the same vein as The Dark Knight, forget about it; this is more like Iron Man, albeit with less flash and not quite the same quality of story but certainly enjoying the same kind of innate humor and lighter side that balances out the action, except in Hornet the movie is about the laughs first, the action second, and the story a distant third, pretty much the opposite of Director Jon Favreau's modern masterpiece of the Superhero genre. Sony's Blu-ray release of The Green Hornet is, as-expected, rock-solid from top to bottom. Strong video, great audio, and a quality assortment of extras makes this disc one to own. Recommended.
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1989
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Special Edition
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Director's Cut
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20th Anniversary Edition
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