6.5 | / 10 |
Users | 3.3 | |
Reviewer | 3.5 | |
Overall | 3.3 |
Three mysterious strangers terrorize a young couple in a remote house after they return from a wedding.
Starring: Liv Tyler, Scott Speedman, Gemma Ward, Kip Weeks, Laura MargolisHorror | 100% |
Thriller | 62% |
Video codec: VC-1
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English SDH, French, Spanish
25GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
BD-Live
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 4.0 | |
Video | 3.5 | |
Audio | 5.0 | |
Extras | 1.0 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
You're gonna die.
The Strangers is 87 minutes of despair and hopelessness. It may be one of the most
depressing, disturbing, to-the-point films of the decade, brutally honest in its display of terror and
fear. It is a movie without a reason behind the terror, leaving the audience as confused and
frightened as the victims portrayed therein. The film furnishes a winning combination that offers
just the right amounts of psychological terror and physical violence, and is reminiscent of
2007's Vacancy, although
The
Strangers is far more vague, depressing, and horrifying. There are several genuine shocks
throughout the course of the picture, some, and one in particular, that any astute audience
member will pick up on several minutes before they happen, and others, particularly in the film's
climactic moments, that will shock and disturb audiences, offering horror fans an ending that
perfectly concludes the depressed and confused tone of the picture while commenting on the true
meaning of terror.
Who knows where terror lurks...
The Strangers visit Blu-ray in a 1080p, 2.35:1-framed transfer. Most of the visuals throughout the film offer a mixture of shadows and poorly lit locations that are drenched in a soft golden, amber, or red hue. The color brightens up in a few flashbacks scenes of the wedding the characters attended in the early moments of the film. Here, colors pick up a bit though flesh tones appear pale but seemingly accurate. Detail is moderate throughout the film. There is a slight softness to much of the transfer. Take a scene after James has left to get the cigarettes and Kristen is left to wander the house. For all the trinkets and furniture, none of it stands out as particularly strong, and the image lacks realistic depth. The soft lighting clearly plays a part in this, and the disc seems to resolve the detail as best it can, given the lighting conditions and inherently straightforward style of filmmaking that does make the movie feel more intimate and immediately dangerous. Blacks appear crushed in certain scenes, but deep and accurate in others, and in some scenes, the blacks take on a hint of gray. The Strangers offers viewers a solid transfer, one that suits the dim, demoralizing look of the picture well.
The Strangers invades Blu-ray with a well-mixed DTS-HD MA 5.1 lossless soundtrack. The sound is bass-heavy to add a palpable sense of foreboding to the beginning of the movie. It is extremely effective, and, along with the baritone voiceover, the film effectively signals the coming of something terrible. The music, at times, plays quietly in the corners of the soundtrack, almost as if it is forcibly hidden away, again a means of adding to the creepy atmosphere of the film. The track does well to create minor ambience in the early scenes, for example reproducing the sound of crickets chirping outside the house that sound as natural as if they were outside your own home on a sticky summer's night. The first knock on the door emanates from the rear channel. It becomes a loud, power-packed series of thuds that are just one more in what has been a string of sonic clues to set the mood for the film. A smoke alarm that goes off in chapter six sounds as real as it gets, that annoying high-pitched screech that is so effective in doing its job. A car crash in chapter 10 is loud but clean, the smashing and crushing of metal on metal a powerful moment in the film as each speaker practically throws shattered glass and twisted fenders into the living room. Surrounds are used prominently throughout the entire movie, and the film features a nearly nonstop barrage of the sounds of violence and terror played with pinpoint precision. From the slightest whisper to the loudest cry for help, from the most subtle nuance to the most violent crashes heard throughout the film, The Strangers relies as much on its soundtrack as it does its visuals to convey the terror of the film, and the Blu-ray does not disappoint in the least.
The Strangers leaves much to the imagination, offering only minimal bonus materials. The Elements of Terror (1080i, 9:13) is first. This supplemental feature describes the film as "a new approach to the genre," a "terror" picture rather than a traditional horror film. The piece, through interview snippets with the cast and crew, presents viewers with the ideas behind the film, a look at the set, the capturing of the sounds, the challenges of acting in a film such as this, the make-up, and the visual effects. Two deleted scenes (480p, 4:51) are next. Finally, this disc is BD-Live (Blu-ray profile 2.0) enabled. The page offers previews for upcoming Blu-ray and theatrical releases, but no exclusive content.
The Strangers is a fine Terror movie, one that makes its point without spraying the camera with blood for 90 minutes. Rather, the film relies on fear of the unknown by placing both its characters and the audience in imminent peril. The film uses sound, visuals, a deliberately slow pace, and a gradual build-up of tension to tell its frightening tale, and the vague nature of the film, and the pure evil put on display, makes The Strangers a fine addition to the Terror film genre. Universal's Blu-ray release of The Strangers features a rather subdued video transfer that appears accurate to the film's intended look and a dynamic soundtrack that greatly adds to the palpable fear of the film. Unfortunately, the studio has skimped on the bonus materials. The Strangers makes for a fine addition to any Terror aficionado's Blu-ray library. Recommended.
Unrated Edition
2008
Unrated Collector's Edition
2007
Unrated
2010
2009
Director's Cut
2005
Director's Cut
2007
Unrated Edition
2005
Unrated Edition
2006
40th Anniversary Edition
1974
2012
2016
2009
Unrated Director's Cut
2009
2012
Uncut
2013
20th Anniversary Edition
2003
2002
Unrated Edition
2006
2004
Theatrical Cut
2006