The Lighthouse Blu-ray Movie

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The Lighthouse Blu-ray Movie United Kingdom

Limited Edition
Arrow | 2019 | 110 min | Rated BBFC: 15 | Jun 12, 2023

The Lighthouse (Blu-ray Movie)

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List price: £21.72
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Movie rating

7.9
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users0.0 of 50.0
Reviewer4.5 of 54.5
Overall4.5 of 54.5

Overview

The Lighthouse (2019)

Two lighthouse keepers try to maintain their sanity while living on a remote and mysterious New England island in the 1890s.

Starring: Willem Dafoe, Robert Pattinson, Valeriia Karaman
Director: Robert Eggers

Drama100%
Horror95%
FantasyInsignificant

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 1.20:1
    Original aspect ratio: 1.2:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1

  • Subtitles

    English SDH

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Single disc (1 BD)

  • Playback

    Region B (A, C untested)

Review

Rating summary

Movie4.5 of 54.5
Video5.0 of 55.0
Audio4.5 of 54.5
Extras5.0 of 55.0
Overall4.5 of 54.5

The Lighthouse Blu-ray Movie Review

Reviewed by Jeffrey Kauffman September 25, 2023

For such a curious film that has "cult item" virtually emblazoned across its misty black and white imagery, The Lighthouse has already had a somewhat surprising three releases in Region A (two 1080, one 4K UHD). Parts of my Region A reviews are reprinted here, as appropriate.

Thunder Rock really should have been one of the biggest hits of the 1939-40 Broadway season. It was a production of the legendary Group Theater, then coming off the single biggest smash hit in its entire history, and it in fact reunited Frances Farmer and Luther Adler, the stars of that very sensation, Clifford Odets’ 1937 play Golden Boy (note that the link points to the movie version). The redoubtable Elia Kazan, then still relatively early in his career (he had actually replaced Adler as part of the touring company of Golden Boy), directed the cast (which also included a number of other Group notables like Lee J. Cobb and Morris Carnovsky), and the script was by the noted author and anthropologist (!) Robert Ardrey. Thunder Rock, which previewed under the title Tower of Light, told the story of two lighthouse keepers (or at least one lighthouse keeper and a supplier of goods to that lighthouse), one of whom is increasingly isolationist and prone to “dreaming” (if not outright hallucinating), and the other, who leaves to embark on a quest to better the world. Thunder Rock opened in November 1939, in the wake of the first battles of what would ultimately become World War II, and its message that involvement in conflict is sometimes necessary in order to end conflict was not well received by an American audience which was itself still pretty resolutely isolationist, as it continued to be by and large until Pearl Harbor was attacked around two years later. Thunder Rock may have failed on “this side of the pond”, closing after only about three weeks, but it was a substantial, even legendary, hit in London, becoming a stage symbol of British resistance. Some fans may know Thunder Rock became a somewhat ill regarded British film in 1942 starring Michael Redgrave which made some substantial changes to the original play while perhaps understandably highlighting Ardrey’s thesis that a sanguine reaction to fascism would only spell disaster. Now some 81 years after Robert Ardrey crafted a piece which (in its stage version, anyway) took place in a lighthouse populated by apparitions and with a plot that evoked both a literal and figurative “storm warning”, another Robert, Robert Eggers, arrives with The Lighthouse, a kind of nightmarish “two hander” which is similarly located, and which offers a spooky mood and some outstanding performances, but a “message” that may seem somewhat muddled.


It’s not much of a spoiler to state the Robert Eggers, who made such a splash (sorry) a few years ago with The Witch, populates this story with various mythic subtexts and even imagery. Thomas Wake (Willem Dafoe, in a role which could easily bring him an Academy Award nomination in a few days) is a crusty old seaman who is mentoring a novice named Ephraim Winslow (Robert Pattinson) in a completely isolated lighthouse somewhere in New England (the film’s crew actually built a lighthouse from scratch in Nova Scotia for the shoot, according to the interesting featurette included on this Blu-ray disc as a supplement). Much as with Eggers’ previous foray into quasi-horror, there’s mood aplenty from the opening fog shrouded scenes which seem to be emerging directly from the filmmaker’s Id, but almost instantly Eggers depicts two characters who are each seemingly hiding something, with some increasing angst accruing.

The reference to Id may indicate that there’s a certain Freudian ambience to The Lighthouse, especially with regard to the power dynamic between the elder Wake and younger Winslow (a draft of the script seen in the featurette simply refers to the characters as “Old” and “Young”), which ultimately has some at least slightly sexual overtones. But the film is filled with other imagery that evokes everything from folklore (visions of a kind of frightening mermaid haunt Ephraim) to Greek mythology (the final moment seems to be a seafaring version of part of the Prometheus story, and indeed Prometheus as the “bringer of light” might be appropriately seen as informing the story from the get go).

The “secrets” which are ultimately revealed about Wake and Winslow have a surface logic, but by the point in the film where they’re doled out, things have gotten so generally gonzo due to the mental imbalance of at least one (and arguably both) of the characters that it’s hard to know exactly what is “the truth” and what isn’t. There’s also a reveal about Ephraim’s name which may indicate that Eggers is really trying to (and I’ll be a bit circumspect here in order not to post any outright spoilers) go what might be termed a “Persona route”. As such, there are probably going to be a whole slew of unanswered questions that various viewers may have as the film comes to its calamitous close, but that said, the film has an undeniably gravitational pull which, like the ferocious tides surrounding the lighthouse in the film, is impossible not to feel.


The Lighthouse Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  5.0 of 5

The Lighthouse is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Arrow Video with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 1:20:1. Arrow provides the same insert booklet for both its 4K UHD and 1080 releases, hence the following information:

The Lighthouse is presented in 1.19:1 with 5.1 sound. The 4K UHD release of the film is presented in 4K resolution with HDR10 and Dolby Vision.

The 4K UHD master data files were sourced from NBC Universal.
I frankly noticed little if any difference between this presentation and the A24 1080 release for Region A, and so some of my original comments from both my review of the original Lionsgate and subsequent A24 reviews are repeated here. Shot on film and obviously framed in an "old school" aspect ratio, The Lighthouse is a stylistic tour de force, though that "style" can mean an often very dark presentation that is often bathed in chiaroscuro. To cut to the chase, this is very similar to the Lionsgate release, but as with the A24 version this Arrow release struck my eyes as looking just ever so slightly darker than the first Lionsgate outing, something that's most apparent in the more brightly lit outdoor moments. I'd argue that compression is improved as well, as some of the admittedly minor banding that showed up in the Lionsgate release seems to have been ameliorated. That may have also contributed to a somewhat tighter resolving grain field, though this is still a very grainy looking enterprise by design.


The Lighthouse Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  4.5 of 5

The Lighthouse offers a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track that derives considerable surround activity from the glut of ambient environmental effects that are a pretty ubiquitous part of the sound design. Everything from screeching seagulls to the crash of waves echo through the side and rear channels with nice authenticity. The weird thing about this film is it almost plays like a silent a lot of the time, with long stretches going by without much if any dialogue, leaving the soundtrack to be populated with nothing other than ambient environmental effects. That said, dialogue (which is fairly heavy accented with dialect work on the part of both actors) is rendered cleanly and clearly throughout (there are subtitles to help with understanding some of the colloquialisms being utilized). Mark Korven's kind of minimalist score also sounds evocative and full bodied throughout.


The Lighthouse Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  5.0 of 5

  • Audio Commentary with Writer / Director / Producer Robert Eggers

  • Audio Commentary by Guy Adams and Alexandra Benedict

  • Art of Darkness: Making The Lighthouse (HD; 1:11:25) is a really excellent newly produced multi-part documentary that provides quite a bit of background and context, even if its Deciphering chapter may still leave more than a few unanswered questions for enquiring minds.

  • The Lighthouse Next Door (HD; 19:32) is another new piece, an engaging visual essay by Kat Ellinger.

  • Deleted Scenes (HD; 2:59)

  • The Lighthouse: A Dark and Stormy Tale (HD; 37:56) is a very interesting piece that delves into some of the subtext of the story while also providing some production information and interstitial interviews (which are almost shocking looking since they're in color).
  • Theatrical Trailers (HD; 3:08)

  • Image Gallery (HD)
In addition this is another handsomely packaged limited edition from Arrow, with a reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Jeffrey Alan Love, a 60 page perfect bound book featuring essays by Simon Abrams, Wickham Clayton, Martyn Conterio and Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, a fold out double sided poster and six double sided collector's postcards. Everything is contained in a nicely designed slipbox.


The Lighthouse Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  4.5 of 5

I'd be rather hard pressed to sum up what The Lighthouse "means", but it's one of those films that has indelible impact perhaps due to the very fact that it's often inscrutable. Dafoe and Pattinson are both pretty amazing here (and I'm one who has never really cottoned to Pattinson's acting for some reason), and the entire film is awash (sorry again) in an absolutely palpable mood. This Arrow 1080 version offers secure technical merits, and both the on disc supplements and Arrow's typically nicely designed package and swag are excellent. Highly recommended.


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