The Smurfs 2 Blu-ray Movie

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The Smurfs 2 Blu-ray Movie United States

Blu-ray + DVD + UV Digital Copy
Sony Pictures | 2013 | 105 min | Rated PG | Dec 03, 2013

The Smurfs 2 (Blu-ray Movie)

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Movie rating

5.2
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users3.8 of 53.8
Reviewer4.0 of 54.0
Overall3.9 of 53.9

Overview

The Smurfs 2 (2013)

The Smurfs team up with their human friends to rescue Smurfette, who has been kidnapped by Gargamel since she knows a secret spell that can turn the evil sorcerer's newest creation - creatures called the Naughties - into real Smurfs.

Starring: Hank Azaria, Neil Patrick Harris, Brendan Gleeson, Jayma Mays, Katy Perry
Director: Raja Gosnell

Family100%
Animation82%
Fantasy71%
Comedy68%
Comic book24%

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
    Video resolution: 1080p
    Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
    Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1

  • Audio

    English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
    French (Canada): DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
    Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
    English: Dolby Digital 5.1
    French: Dolby Digital 2.0
    English (DD 5.1) & French (DD 2.0) are Audio Descriptive audio tracks options.

  • Subtitles

    English, English SDH, French, Spanish

  • Discs

    50GB Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (1 BD, 1 DVD)
    UV digital copy
    DVD copy

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region free 

Review

Rating summary

Movie2.5 of 52.5
Video5.0 of 55.0
Audio5.0 of 55.0
Extras2.5 of 52.5
Overall4.0 of 54.0

The Smurfs 2 Blu-ray Movie Review

Less magic, more monotony.

Reviewed by Martin Liebman December 2, 2013

Time to Smurf some magic.

The Smurfs is a delightful little film that played nicely within its kid-friendly confines and generated plenty of smiles with its silly but playfully mischievous plot. The film is replete with balanced humor and a visual novelty, a simple but adorable little experience with nothing but family-friendly vibes and plenty of zest to go around. Its successor, the aptly titled The Smurfs 2, offers much of the same but gone is a large chunk of the breezy charm, replaced here with a rather tedious pace despite a halfway imaginative origins story. Raja Gosnell returns to the Director's chair. He brings much of the same visual pizazz and appeal to the project, but this film gets too bogged down in run-around repetitive action and dry themes. It's only occasionally whimsical and oftentimes overwrought, failing to find a happy medium balance to its pace and never reaching that summit of agreeableness upon which the first film was built. While both films feel largely superficial, this sequel comes across as especially vapid. It offers some basic fun but cannot match the spunk and spirit of its predecessor in any scene.

Well, at least you have better breath than Azrael.


It's Smurfette's (voiced by Katy Perry) birthday, and that means she's having her yearly birthday dream, a dream in which she sees herself not a natural Smurf but rather a creation of the evil wizard Gargamel (Hank Azaria) who made her to infiltrate and destroy the Smurfs. Papa Smurf (voiced by Jonathan Winters) reassures her of her proper place amongst the blue creatures. When she comes to believe her fellow Smurfs have forgotten her birthday, she retreats to a secluded place only to be accosted and kidnapped by Vexy (voiced by Christina Ricci), one of two small, gray, part-Smurf creatures Gargamel, now a worldwide wizard sensation, has created in hopes of finding an endless source of Smurf essence. With Smurfette, Gargamel hopes to secure unlimited powers. Papa, Vanity (voiced by John Oliver), Clumsy (voiced by Anton Yelchin), and Grouchy (voiced by George Lopez) travel to the human realm to save her. They team up with old friends Patrick (Neil Patrick Harris) and his wife Grace (Jayma Mays), their son Blue (Jacob Tremblay), and Patrick's stepfather Victor (Brendan Gleeson) on a mission to Paris to save their companion before Gargamel can use Smurfette's essence to further his evil agenda.

First, the things the film gets right. The Smurfs 2, much like its predecessor, is an unmitigated success of color and buoyancy, a treat for the eyes and a simplified but oftentimes visually arresting experience in terms of its lively and audience-friendly presentation. The animation is boundlessly terrific, a near perfect blend of real and digital. The Smurf characters look terrific; they feel voluminous, very lifelike, and they integrate seamlessly with both the real-world environment and their human co-stars. The picture offers playful action, action that's safe for the entire family, replacing real peril with comic mischief and harmless whimsy. It's everything a child's movie of this variety should be and in every scene there's no missing the fact that the series has struck gold in its superficial presentation. The Smurfs are brought to life with faultless voice performances, and the villain Gargamel is again the film's highlight, the character enjoying the prefect over-the-top villainous performance from Hank Azaria, the actor delivering one of the best comically inclined, deliberately goofy, and hammy efforts cinema has ever seen.

Unfortunately, most of what the film gets right is largely superficial. While the previous film didn't feature all that much dramatic depth, it found an excellent balance between all of the external shenanigans, its amazing visual appearance, and a bit of drama, soul, and heart underneath it all. The Smurfs 2, despite what would appear to be a deeper, more personal story rather than the first's classically simple "fish out of water" tale, can't find a rhythm to save its life. It opens nicely and certainly breezes through a few stretches, but the film feels bogged down with several unnecessary and overlong scenes. It attempts to find a double purpose by exploring not only a Smurf origins story but dramatically furthering the human side of the equation, too. While Brendan Gleeson is rock-solid, as usual, his character feels fully superfluous. It's nice to see him in the movie, but there's not much contribution of great importance. Chances are the youngest audiences will tire of the film's dramatic pauses and find little value in the picture's effort to tell a deeper story rather than simply cover the screen with zany Smurfs battling a mischievous villain. Unlike the first picture, this one takes itself a little too seriously for its own good, and the result is a fair but oftentimes dragging experience.


The Smurfs 2 Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  5.0 of 5

The Smurfs 2 looks marvelous on Blu-ray. This is one of the best-looking Blu-ray discs on the market, showcasing perfect details and robust colors throughout. Image clarity is consistently striking. The picture is meticulously clean and perfectly defined in every shot and no matter the location or lighting conditions, though this is, generally, a very bright movie even in its darker moments. Details are resplendent, whether digital dirt and creases and skin textures on Smurf clothing and flesh or real-life grasses, stone walkways, concrete, building façades, dazzling performance hall interiors, or human skin textures and clothing lines. Every frame provides a perfect example of Blu-ray image goodness. Colors are equally impressive. Blue Smurf skin and eyes truly pop off the screen, while natural green foliage, gray city concrete elements, regal gold interiors, and a diverse range of colors in a candy shop show an incredible array of balanced, brilliant, natural shades. Black levels are perfect, whether Gargamel's robe or the interior of a carriage. Skin tones never stray from natural shades. The image shows no noise, banding, or blocky backgrounds. This is a spectacular, reference-quality transfer from Sony.


The Smurfs 2 Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  5.0 of 5

The Smurfs 2 features a robust, well-defined, and fully pleasing DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack. This is a rich, absorbing, full presentation that delivers musical notes with uncanny lifelike precision. There's perfect balance and body to every note, with wide natural spacing and just the right blend of surround information. Ambient support elements are very nicely defined throughout the film, whether city traffic, crowd applause, or natural flavors. Every moment feels fully immersive, but naturally so, whether the situation calls for heavier support pieces or nuanced elements that help better define a quieter moment. Action effects are equally impressive, particularly some deep, dynamic sound effects that power into the stage near film's end. Dialogue plays evenly and accurately from the center. As is the video, this track is of reference quality from beginning to end.


The Smurfs 2 Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  2.5 of 5

The Smurfs 2 contains a hodgepodge of small supplements.

  • The Smurfs: The Legend of Smurfy Hollow (HD, 1.78:1, DD 2.0, 22:15): A short The Smurfs film.
  • Deleted Scenes (HD): Gargamel's Interview & Crowd Bows (1:21), Passive Agressive and Panicky (1:22), Crowd Bows Again (0:23), Gargamel Steals Present (0:48), and Family Sees Gargamel Atop the Eiffel Tower (0:24).
  • Daddy's Little Girl: The Journey of Smurfette (HD, 6:21): The filmmakers discuss the film's plot, its place in Smurfs lore, Katy Perry's voice acting, and the picture's overreaching theme.
  • The Naughties! The Tale of Hackus and Vexy (HD, 5:42): Cast and crew paint these characters' backgrounds and shed light on their place in the film. The piece also looks at character design and voice acting.
  • The Puurrfect Companion: Azrael's Tail (HD, 4:40): A look at the character's place in the film alongside Gargamel, feline voice acting, the cat's personality, and the blend of live action and digital felines used in the film.
  • Animating Azrael (HD, 3:24): A short look at the painstaking process of recreating a real cat in the digital realm.
  • Evolution of the Naughties (HD, 3:41): VFX Supervisor Rich Hoover guides viewers through the process of creating the film's two new characters.
  • Previews: Additional Sony titles.
  • DVD Copy.
  • UV Digital Copy.


The Smurfs 2 Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  4.0 of 5

The Smurfs 2 may be a cute, cuddly movie, but it lacks the novelty, charm, and flow of it predecessor. The film exceeds its boundaries, attempting to put together a slightly deeper experience than is required. The result is a movie that's occasionally too slow, too absent the whimsy and sheer fun factor of the original. Hank Azaria is again the best reason to watch, and he's only improved on his comically deviant villain Gargamel. The Smufs show little personality, even in the confines of their specific essences, and even highlight character Smurfette can't escape the clutches of a very generic arc. It's a decent sequel but it's nowhere near as much fun as the original. Sony's Blu-ray release of The Smurfs 2 features superb video and audio. A decent array of extras are included. Worth a rental.