6.1 | / 10 |
Users | 4.2 | |
Reviewer | 3.0 | |
Overall | 3.6 |
From Revolution Studios and and Sony Pictures, Xander Cage (Vin Diesel) is a notorious underground thrill-seeker who, until now, has been deemed untouchable by the law. But when crack NSA Agent Gibbsons convinces Cage to infiltrate a ruthless Russian crime ring, this new breed of secret agent (codename: XXX) takes down the enemies of justice with a vengeance in this high-octane, turbo-charged thrill-ride from the acclaimed director of The Fast and the Furious.
Starring: Vin Diesel, Asia Argento, Marton Csokas, Samuel L. Jackson, Michael RoofAction | 100% |
Thriller | 58% |
Adventure | 33% |
Video codec: MPEG-2
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 2.40:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
English: LPCM 5.1 (48kHz, 16-bit)
French: Dolby Digital 5.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
English, English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Cantonese, Korean, Thai
25GB Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Region free
Movie | 3.5 | |
Video | 2.0 | |
Audio | 4.5 | |
Extras | 0.0 | |
Overall | 3.0 |
If you’re going to send someone to save the world, make sure they like it the way it is.
While Speed may
have helped usher in the era of adrenaline-based, extreme-sports inspired action heroes,
xXx actually makes the action hero himself an adrenaline junkie, extreme sports athlete.
Action films have always been replete with ridiculously impossible and over-the-top stunts, but
have you tuned into the "X-Games" recently? There are actually real people out there that
perform these kinds of death-defying stunts for a living, and so popular and incredible are these
athletes that they no longer perform in obscurity but rather have their exploits broadcast around
the world for people to enjoy with wonderment that most of these stunts are performed
so
flawlessly, and usually without serious injury to the athlete. An action character whose backstory
places him as a world-famous stunt man lends
credibility to some of the stunts he performs. Some of them are just too good, even for an
athlete of his supposed caliber, but so what? xXx showcases riveting action and
death-defying stunts, nothing more, nothing less. An extreme athlete as an action movie hero
seems a
no-brainer, and xXx could be one of those "everything I know about being an action hero
I
learned from..." posters, detailing the "how to escape down the side of a burning building on a
motorcycle as the flames engulf everything but me" to "I know how to handle a gun from the 3
months of first-person shooter video games I played while recovering from a broken leg."
Who do I consider a role model? Slim Pickens, of course.
One of the first titles released on Blu-ray, xXx's 2.40:1, 1080p high definition transfer is a mess. This is without a doubt the most disappointed I've been with a Blu-ray so far. As such an early release, no doubt part of the problem can be attributed to growing pains, but I nevertheless expected a better looking transfer than this. The opening segment of the movie just looks bad. There's really no other way of describing it. Black levels are terrible, any segment of the picture that should be dark is far too bright, fine detail is absent, and every edge is soft and lacks definition. The transfer cleans up somewhat after this awful introduction to the film, but the same problems remain, just on a smaller scale. Detail and sharpness are disappointing in many shots. Long-distance shots fare poorly. Trees, for example, look like a glob of a green-colored mass smeared onto the film. Façades and distance shots of buildings lack texture and detail, looking flat and dull instead. Blacks remain disappointing, although sometimes they rise to the level of respectable, such as during a nighttime battle in chapter four. Although mostly flat, the image does at times have a fair amount of three-dimensionality, but these instances are too few and far between to really count for much. A few scenes, notably those that are very brightly lit, such as a sequence on a snowy mountainside near the end of the move, look alright, about what we would expect from an average high-definition image. There is a bit of shimmering in some scenes as the image becomes brighter and darker from one frame to the next. Flesh tones fare rather well, never appearing overly red. There is no doubt that this is one of the lesser Blu-ray offerings to date. To this disc's credit, I skipped around on the DVD version I own and every scene, especially the film's opening, looks equally bad (or worse) on that disc. Still, the Blu-ray is only slightly better, just a bit sharper and cleaner with better color reproduction, but not much more in the way of detail. I expected much better, but chock this one up to the growing pains of a new format that less than two years after its launch is producing truly breathtaking imagery that puts anything I've ever seen at home to shame. Hopefully this movie will be re-released in the future and if the video quality is markedly improved, I'll be first in line to buy it.
Even though the picture quality was substandard, the PCM 5.1 uncompressed soundtrack that accompanies xXx is anything but. This loud and entertaining track is awesome, guaranteed to make you jump out of your seat on a few occasions. The uncompressed mix is decidedly superior to the Dolby Digital mixes on both the Blu-ray and the DVD, coming off as louder and much more defined. The heavy metal tune "Feuer Frei" heard at the beginning of the movie courtesy of the band Rammstein attacks the listener through every speaker. The scene is an awesome sonic experience, and even as someone who doesn't generally enjoy this kind of music, I found myself feeling the urge to head bang, so loud and crystal-clear was it that I felt like part of the crowd and lost in the moment. Bass is punchy and loud through the entire movie, and every action scene is first-rate. Directionality is excellent. Sounds pan seamlessly form one speaker to the next, and are always in just the right spot in relation to the action on the screen. Jets scream from the front to the rear, bullets come at you from all directions, and the music finds its way into every corner of the listening area. An avalanche in chapter 12 offers some of the deepest, foundation-rattling, headache-inducing bass yet. When the scene was over and the room briefly quiet again, all the neighborhood dogs were barking and my cats had scurried out of the media room, and I'm frankly surprised my ears weren't bleeding. Dialogue reproduction is perfect. This is a first-rate track, and the sins of the video are almost forgotten and forgiven by the wonderful action experience that listening to xXx on Blu-ray is.
This Blu-ray is completely devoid of supplemental materials related to the movie itself. Only 1080p trailers for Stealth, S.W.A.T., and Into the Blue are to be found as extras on the disc. To the contrary, the DVD version of the film offers viewers "The Xander Zone," a section of the disc complete with a director's commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, a music video, and more.
There is no doubt about it: this is a silly, ridiculous action movie, and taken as completely straight and serious, it stinks. However, if you allow yourself to have a load of fun with it and accept it for the adrenaline-pumping, hard rocking good time it is, xXx proves itself to be one of the finest action movie delights since the genre's glory days in the 1980s. Unfortunately, the disc's subpar video quality and non-existent extras make the disc a letdown. The audio quality is undeniably strong, and anyone who likes this movies and has a decent lossless set-up owes it to themselves to upgrade from the DVD for the sound mix alone. Those simply looking for pristine video quality should skip this one, but the movie itself is definitely worth renting for action and adrenaline junkies.
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