7.5 | / 10 |
| Users | 0.0 | |
| Reviewer | 4.0 | |
| Overall | 4.0 |
A community searches for answers when 17 children mysteriously leave their homes in the middle of the night.
Starring: Josh Brolin, Julia Garner, Alden Ehrenreich, Austin Abrams, Cary Christopher| Horror | Uncertain |
| Thriller | Uncertain |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: Dolby Atmos
English: Dolby TrueHD 7.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
English: Dolby Digital 5.1
French: Dolby Digital 5.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
English SDH, French, Spanish
Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Digital copy
Region A (B, C untested)
| Movie | 4.0 | |
| Video | 4.5 | |
| Audio | 5.0 | |
| Extras | 2.0 | |
| Overall | 4.0 |
Yet another smash hit from Warner Bros. during a banner year, Zach Cregger's Weapons is carefully-made horror with an intriguing hook. Having previously found success with his second film Barbarian after largely sticking with comedy (including as a founding member of the American sketch comedy troupe The Whitest Kids U' Know), the writer/director establishes a strong tone very quickly, draws out solid performances from the cast, and sprinkles in more than enough wall-placed scares and gore to satiate genre fans. Shrewdly borrowing the patchwork, character-driven stylings of Paul Thomas Anderson's Magnolia and mixing in a few nods to classic horror films along the way, Weapons shows room for improvement around the edges but is nonetheless a solid step forward from a new name to watch.

What few clues are gathered seem to largely point in the same direction: the home of surviving student Alex, whose mom and dad (Callie Schuttera and Whitmer Thomas) have recently taken in her sick aunt Gladys (Amy Madigan) for an extended stay. The young boy dutifully returns home after school every day but, to outsiders, it's come to look all but abandoned with trash in the backyard and newspaper covering most of the windows. Separate "investigations" by Justine, Paul, and homeless drug addict James (Austin Abrams) -- who's really just looking for stuff to pawn -- have yielded the same conclusion: something's not right in there, but no one's done anything about it yet.
Weapons' first half is where the Magnolia comparisons come in, as great pains are taken to weave together separate stories featuring Justine, Archer, Paul, Marcus, and Alex, each told from their perspective and occasionally intersecting before the story eventually converges. Gladys proves to be a major player and is undoubtedly Weapons' breakout star and, while Amy Madigan's performance is great and the makeup department certainly worked overtime on her look, it's her introduction and continued antics where the film's tone takes a half-step backwards. Though it regularly flirts with black comedy along the way, Weapons devolves more fully into abstract insanity during its third act and, if I'm being honest, this tends to undercut the central mystery in a way that feels unsatisfying. Its careful precision -- up until that point, at least -- invites rewatches and closer scrutiny while the home stretch mostly falls into genre clichés, though Weapons' exceedingly gory final showdown is indeed batshit crazy and ultimately won me over.
It's tough to grade horror films; they've got to legitimately scare the viewer while delivering something a little deeper to earn their keep, at least in my book. Weapons does indeed deliver on suspense and shock value at critical moments while flirting with symbolism along the way and, while it doesn't fully stick the latter landing, the writer/director's talent is obvious if not a little too dependent on existing films as an easy structural and nostalgic crutch. This is nonetheless a fairly refreshing effort, even though one can safely assume that its success will lead to follow-ups that hopefully don't travel down the wrong roads. (It's already been revealed that Creggar has definite plans for a prequel film starring Gladys, which doesn't exactly spark my interest... but who knows? This movie surprised me too.)
Warner Bros. kinda-sorta does right by Weapons with their requisite three-tiered home video approach, offering separate 4K and Blu-ray
packages as well as a preferred Steelbook
combo pack that's probably sold out by now. All options get you a proportionately solid A/V presentation and a trio of short but solid
featurettes, though a much more in-depth collection of bonus features would've made Weapons an easy Top 10 favorite at year's end.

As usual, please see my separate 4K review of Weapons for an overview of its visual aesthetic, which doesn't break new ground in the horror genre but at least adds more than a few appreciated splashes of color rather than being near-monochromatic from start to finish. Unsurprisingly, Warner Bros.' downscaled 1080p/SDR presentation stands as a solid runner-up that actually appears brighter on the whole but is naturally unable to reproduce the UHD's darker tones in as smooth or convincing of a manner. Nonetheless, everything looks good here within strict format boundaries, from fine detail to color representation, black levels, and even disc encoding, which seems to run at a smooth and supportive bit rate on this dual-layered disc while only showing stay and mostly inconsequential amounts of compression artifacts. All things considered, this Blu-ray's transfer should look quite good on small to medium-sized displays, so those who have yet to upgrade to 4K will still be getting a quality presentation of this visually proficient film.

Weapons' Dolby Atmos mix brings the goods with a sturdy and immersive presentation that fills out crucial moments with strong atmospherics including channel panning, discrete effects, and a solid amount of LFE response when needed. All the while dialogue remains crisp and easily understood, natural and organic effects are brought in to naturally fill out everyday locations, and there's more than enough room left over for the original score credited to Ryan Holladay, Hays Holladay, and writer/director Zach Cregger with bookending pop music cues by George Harrison and MGMT. The Atmos-exclusive height channels are used sparingly but effectively including for several direct-overhead thumps and bumps, other surprises, and sporadic music support. Those limited to 7.1 or 5.1 will still find this to be an engaging sonic experience, though, and one that adds to overall enjoyment without feeling too showy or overcooked.
Optional subtitles, including English (SDH), are offered during the main feature and all three extras listed below.

This one-disc release ships in a keepcase with poster-themed cover artwork (identical to the 4K edition) and a Digital Copy redemption code. The bonus features are of very good quality despite their brevity, which makes it all the more disappointing that more weren't included. An audio commentary would've been fantastic.

Zach Cregger's Weapons was one of this year's most talked-about horror films and a fairly original one at that, and it will hopefully stand on its own as long as possible before likely devolving into an ongoing cinematic universe. For now it remains a decently solid genre effort that invites analysis and several rewatches, and Warner Bros.' trio of home video editions are largely up to the challenge of satisfying fans and first-timers alike. The A/V merits are proportionately solid across the board although the trio of bonus features, though very good despite their brevity, could have easily been expanded upon to sweeten the deal. Whatever option you choose, though, Weapons is Recommended.

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Collector's Edition
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Extended Cut
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Collector's Edition
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