7.1 | / 10 |
Users | 4.5 | |
Reviewer | 3.5 | |
Overall | 4.1 |
The successful career of Hollywood screenwriter, Dalton Trumbo, comes to an end when he's blacklisted in the 1940s for being a Communist.
Starring: Bryan Cranston, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Louis C.K., David James Elliott, Elle FanningBiography | 100% |
Drama | Insignificant |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
English SDH, Spanish
50GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
UV digital copy
BD-Live
Slipcover in original pressing
Region free
Movie | 3.5 | |
Video | 5.0 | |
Audio | 4.5 | |
Extras | 1.0 | |
Overall | 3.5 |
Right or wrong or blended in some soupy gray area of morality, trust, conscience, and self-righteousness, man has always demonstrated a willingness to shun the whole to spite the part, to completely dismiss someone or something for one reason or another, even if everything else, in his or her estimation, comes up smelling like roses. Or it can be the other way around, to champion one thing or another for one particular reason, dismissing everything else as mere background noise or demonstrating single-issue bias and favoritism. It's seen all the time in online comments or heard all the time in water cooler or dinner table discussions, and usually centered on some hot-button political issue. "I'm boycotting store X because they don't support political cause Y." "I'm going to start shopping at store X because they support political cause Y." "I'm not voting for candidate X because she supports issue Y, though I love her stance on issues A, B, and C." "I'm voting for candidate X because I love her position on issue Y, but that doesn't mean I like her stance on issues A, B, and C." For most, it's less a crusade and more a personal choice that never makes headlines or has any real effect on the entities on either side of the equation. Occasionally, however, standing up for a controversial belief in the face of overwhelming disapproval of said belief can be a recipe for trouble. Mix in celebrity, the spotlight, and maybe even congress and national security and suddenly one man's values are a nation's enemy. That's the story of Trumbo, the movie influenced by the real-life events that saw acclaimed screenwriter and avowed Communist Dalton Trumbo "blacklisted," imprisoned, and forced to write Oscar-winning screenplays while tucked away in his bathtub and submitting them under pseudonyms.
Testify.
Trumbo's 1080p transfer is not destined for any Blu-ray black lists. Quite the opposite, it's a real looker and a top-end presentation through and through. The movie doesn't push any period-influenced color scheme or photographic quality. It's sourced from a digital shoot that leaves the color palette largely in a neutral, but very attractive, state. Colors leap off the screen, particularly bright, lush greens but also attire, including neckties and dresses. Details are superb. Suits are particularly revealing, showcasing precise fabric and seam definition even at medium distance. Faces are complex mazes of lines, wrinkles, freckles, hairs, and makeup. Every shot is razor-sharp and background details are crisply defined. A few close-ups are particularly noteworthy, including a shot that reveals extremely fine paper texturing and a typewriter's mechanical parts and functions. Black levels hold deep and accurate when called upon, and flesh tones capture a pleasant, natural shading. The image suffers from no perceptible compression anomalies or serious source interferences. This is a gorgeous presentation from Universal.
Trumbo's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack is nearly every bit as good as its video companion. Richly defined and nicely spaced music is a highlight, but the track's ability to immerse listeners in the movie's many areas is its finest asset. Whether room-filling ambience at parties, natural exterior details, crowd reactions at congressional testimonies, clanking silverware and guest chatter at a reception, or effortless and filling reverberation when John Wayne addresses a crowd around the 11-minute mark, there's never a shortage of enveloping details, all of which come precisely placed and with lifelike definition. About the only disappointment comes when a movie projector whir settles in the front, even when it's clear the sound's source is behind the listener. Otherwise, there's no room for complaint. Refined, center-placed, and perfectly prioritized dialogue round out a very satisfying listen.
Trumbo contains two featurettes. A voucher for a UV/iTunes digital copy code is included with purchase.
Trumbo is a more compelling movie in its second half, when it's less political and more personal, as it leaves behind the interesting, but nevertheless somewhat stuffy, political dealings and really focuses on a man writing some of cinema's best screenplays from his bathtub and crediting other names for his work. The movie's ability to take a broader historical subject and humanize it well beyond the dusty pages of history is incredible, made possible by a brilliant performance from Bryan Cranston. The movie has its weaknesses here and there, including an occasionally struggling pace and some dubious history and definitions, but it's an altogether quality film on most every other level. Universal's Blu-ray release of Trumbo features outstanding video and terrific audio but shortchanges audiences with only two throwaway supplements. Nevertheless, the release earns a recommendation.
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