Us 4K Blu-ray Movie

Home

Us 4K Blu-ray Movie United States

4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital Copy
Universal Studios | 2019 | 116 min | Rated R | Jun 18, 2019

Us 4K (Blu-ray Movie)

Price

List price: $22.98
Amazon: $12.99 (Save 43%)
Third party: $12.99 (Save 43%)
In Stock
Buy Us 4K on Blu-ray Movie

Movie rating

7.2
 / 10

Blu-ray rating

Users4.2 of 54.2
Reviewer4.0 of 54.0
Overall4.0 of 54.0

Overview

Us 4K (2019)

A mother and a father take their kids to their beach house expecting to enjoy time with friends. But their serenity turns to tension and chaos when some visitors arrive uninvited.

Starring: Lupita Nyong'o, Winston Duke, Elisabeth Moss, Tim Heidecker, Shahadi Wright Joseph
Director: Jordan Peele

HorrorUncertain
MysteryUncertain
ThrillerUncertain
Psychological thrillerUncertain
SurrealUncertain

Specifications

  • Video

    Video codec: HEVC / H.265
    Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
    Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
    Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1

  • Audio

    English: Dolby Atmos
    English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
    French: Dolby Digital Plus 7.1
    Spanish: Dolby Digital Plus 7.1

  • Subtitles

    English SDH, French, Spanish

  • Discs

    Blu-ray Disc
    Two-disc set (2 BDs)
    Digital copy
    4K Ultra HD

  • Packaging

    Slipcover in original pressing

  • Playback

    Region free 

Review

Rating summary

Movie4.0 of 54.0
Video4.5 of 54.5
Audio4.5 of 54.5
Extras3.0 of 53.0
Overall4.0 of 54.0

Us 4K Blu-ray Movie Review

Reviewed by Martin Liebman June 11, 2019

Us is a Horror film with smarts and some teeth behind it. Writer/Director Jordan Peele, the mastermind behind 2017's superb Get Out, crafts a tale of suspense, violence, personalized terror, and large-scale frights, all with sharp social over- and undertones playing alongside. He builds an intimate, personal portrait of longstanding fright that clashes with a far flung yet creepily believable vision of something far bigger and far more sinister. That balance between personally connected terror and the unravelling of the world around makes for an effective juxtaposition that Peele explores in hypnotic cadence, slowly but surely unveiling new realities and revelations with each new scene.


The year is 1986. Young Adelaide Thomas (Madison Curry) wanders away from her family at a Santa Cruz, California carnival and enters a strange hall of mirrors where she frighteningly encounters a perfect double of herself. It’s a traumatizing moment that leaves the girl speechless for many years. Decades later, she’s a grown woman with a husband Gabe (Winston Duke) and two children, Zora and Jason (Shahadi Wright Joseph and Evan Alex, respectively). The family is vacationing in Santa Cruz at Gabe’s jolly insistence. Adelaide’s emotional scars quickly resurface, and she has no desire to remain. But as Gabe brushes off her concerns, the family comes to realize that four red-clad individuals await them outside. It’s not long before they’re in the house, with deadly scissors in hand, and reveal that they are doppelgängers with the intention to kill. As the bloody night progresses, the family fights for its life as a much larger danger is exposed.

Like with Get Out, Peele builds in Us a story of unnerving cadence and terrifying revelation in the tradition of Hitchcock and Shyamalan. The film thrives not on the ebbs and flows of its violence, of scenes of killings and the red-clad doppelgängers stalking and toying with their prey. No, Us is built almost entirely around the psychological. Adelaide's longstanding mental wounds stem from a preview, of sorts, of the future, the child version of herself coming face-to-face with, literally, a living, breathing mirror image. Her fears are all but dismissed by her husband who quickly alters course when confronted with his own vision of himself and of his family. But it's the mental anguish that drives the film, and Peele gradually pulls back the veil on something much larger than a mere physical duplicate. That revelation and its details are not necessarily vital to the story, which is more concerned with deeper thematic drivers that speak to a wide array of content, from individuality to oppression and well beyond. Peele reveals just enough for the audience to puzzle through the real-world ramifications while building a well versed entertainment vessel to hold the deeper content. It's another job well done from one of the up-and-coming greats.

The film is well cast and performed. Lupita Nyong'o's work is of particular note. She harbors a deep-seeded fear born of a single moment when she literally "found herself," and found her fate, in a hall of mirrors. Like much of the movie, the allusion is not subtle, but it's what Peele and Nyong'o do with it that drives the film. Nyong'o goes through the expected process through the film, transitioning from frightened would-be victim to more stout heroine, but not without towing the emotional baggage that defines who she is. The performance is particularly exceptional considering Peele's ultimate reveal, which challenges the actress to find a greater purpose within the character's overreaching arc. Indeed, the film's finale, and the entire dramatic current and thematic layout, offer ample opportunity for study. "Everything in this movie was deliberate," Peele has said, and the cast's ability to fine-tune the arcs and explore the personalities with the depth necessary not to carry the hack-and-slash but rather the more significant content is quite the accomplishment.


Us 4K Blu-ray Movie, Video Quality  4.5 of 5

The included screenshots are sourced from a 1080p Blu-ray disc.

Us was reportedly digitally photographed at a resolution of 3.4K and finished at 2K. Universal's upscaled 2160p/Dolby Vision presentation offers neither color nor clarity improvements that are off-the-charts superior to the Blu-ray, but the modest gains go a long way in creating the best image Us has to offer. Of the two, the image's most readily apparent source of fine-tuning comes via the Dolby Vision color palette. The film opens at night at a Santa Cruz carnival. The Dolby Vision color grading allows for deeper night sky blacks and more refined and eye-catching carnival lights with greater luminance on tap. Throughout the film, at any time of day or under any lighting condition, skin tones appear deeper and more satisfyingly nuanced. There is not a total, dramatic alteration of the palette. Dolby Vision offers a modest refinement that adds to color clarity and nuance. Slight increases in depth and vitality are commonplace, but not to the point that the image appears radically different. Even a sunny, brightly sunlit beach scene in chapter five offers simple adds to color definition along the sky, the sand, and colorful beach towels. Slightly more bright, a bit more organic, a touch more stable and deep, the scene is a good example of the small upward adjustments made to the movie's video quality. Darker scenes, of which there are many, are the most improved, with the more stable, deeper, more dynamic black levels and shadow details on offer enhancing the film's locations and dramatic (and color) tones.

There is also an obvious, but not significant, add to image sharpness. The 2160p resolution reveals a crisper, more complete presentation, finding greater clarity and image stability to both location details and characters alike. While not dramatic, it's easy to see the image refinements, the feel for improved clarity and definition that yields healthier, more natural object definition. Close-ups are much less forgiving on the UHD, showing various bumps and pores and other fine, intimate facial features with more exacting visibility and total clarity. Sharpness improvements additionally solidify the darker scenes, allowing for more commanding stability in visually challenging shots. The UHD also improves noise management, which appears less readily dense on the 4K presentation. There are no other significant source or encode flaws of note. This is very much a refinement rather than an overhaul, and while the added qualities in isolation add little, they add up to make a fairly good UHD image that does improve upon its 1080p counterpart.


Us 4K Blu-ray Movie, Audio Quality  4.5 of 5

Us' Dolby Atmos soundtrack is up to the challenge of delivering the film's fairly intense and involved sonic landscape. There is a natural feel for atmospheric details at the carnival. Plenty of one-off discrete effects pepper the listening area but give way to less dynamic sounds as Adelaide wanders off down towards the beach. The track features many involved moments that offer a harmonious compilation of musical and sound effect sincerity. Discrete details and well engineered sound movements help shape a number of scenes, whether those which are immediately violent or those portending fear and violence. The track makes use of every channel in an effort to fully draw the listener in, which includes sounds such as splatters of blood flinging against surfaces and bloody droplets dripping from walls. The track's ability to fine tune and finely place its sound details create a full, capable atmosphere that perfectly compliments the film's frightening cadence. Bass is aggressive but not dominant. Overhead channels offer little in the way of discrete details but do help better define the larger world around the characters. Dialogue is clear and center focused. It is always well prioritized.


Us 4K Blu-ray Movie, Special Features and Extras  3.0 of 5

Us' UHD disc contains the same extras as can be found on the bundled Blu-ray: a handful of featurettes (which are a little more meaty than the typical ~2 minute Universal throwaways) and a few deleted scenes. A Movies Anywhere digital copy code are included with purchase. This release ships with an embossed slipcover.

  • The Monsters Within Us (2160p/SDR, 4:45): A closer look at the four (or eight, as the case may be) main characters and the challenges of portraying them.
  • Tethered Together: Making Us Twice (2160p/SDR, 7:29): This piece explores the challenges the actors and filmmakers faced in shooting each scene twice, once each with the actors in each character.
  • Redefining a Genre: Jordan Peele's Brand of Horror (2160p/SDR, 5:31): Cast and crew, and Peele himself, talk up Peele's passion for the Horror genre, his favorite Horror films, influences and inspirations, his direction, and more.
  • The Duality of Us (2160p/SDR, 9:56): Peele discusses his deep-seeded fear of doppelgängers, doppelgänger mythology, the film's social themes, imagery, and more.
  • Becoming Red (2160p/SDR, 4:09): Footage featuring Lupita Nyong'o getting into character in between takes.
  • Scene Explorations (2160p/SDR): Peele and the cast break down a trio of key scenes with interview snippets, film clips, storyboards, and behind the scenes footage. Included are Seven Second Massacre (2:40), It's a Trap (2:01), and I Just Want My Little Girl Back (2:56).
  • Deleted Scenes (2160p/SDR, 6:28 total runtime): Included are I Am Not Even Near You, Rabbit Season, That's Badass, Driftwood, The P Is Silent, and I Wanna Go Home.
  • We're All Dying (2160p/SDR, 6:22): Additional footage/outtakes from a beachside scene.
  • As Above, So Below: Grand Pas De Deux (2160p/SDR, 5:02): Zora and Umbrae's dance routine.


Us 4K Blu-ray Movie, Overall Score and Recommendation  4.0 of 5

Peele's ideas open many avenues of thought, and he smartly leaves much of it to the viewer to extrapolate the bigger picture in play. The tale opens up endless possibilities for thought exercise, concerning both the narrative strokes and the thematic issues the film raises in a not-so-subtle but not-so-overt manner. It's very well balanced, generously thoughtful, and impressively crafted and performed. Universal's UHD release of Us delivers high yield video and audio presentations. Several extras are included. Highly recommended.


Other editions

Us: Other Editions