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Dennis Burger

Oscar Nominees 2023

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reviews | Oscar Nominees 2023

our comprehensive roundup of this year’s most notable Academy Award picks

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by the Cineluxe staff
updated March 9, 2023

This year’s Oscar nods were so predictable that we were able to lay this page out more than a week ago and only had to make one change after the nominations were actually announced. It’s kind of sad the industry is so committed to sticking with the safe and known—and, as you’ll see from many of our reviewers’ comments, long. But while there don’t seem to be any masterpieces in the 2023 round of picks, there is a decent number of films that are, if nothing else, engaging, diverting, and demo-worthy.

All the Beauty and Bloodshed (2022)

All the Beauty and Bloodshed

Documentary Feature

Review Coming Soon 

Picture, International Film, Adapted Screenplay, Cinematography, Original Score, Visual Effects, Sound, Makeup & Hairstyling, Production Design

“From the opening pastoral scenes of nature in the French countryside that transition to the bleakness and horror of the trenches and No Man’s Land of the Great War, All Quiet on the Western Front captivates with an unflinching visual style, providing one of the most satisfying cinematic experiences offered by a movie from a streaming service this year.”
read more

Documentary Feature

“The only real complaint I have about All That Breathes is that it ends far too quickly. Granted, the 97-minute runtime already seems brisk on paper, but actually watching it, it doesn’t feel anywhere near that long. Some of that is due to the lack of a conventional narrative but a lot of it boils down to fantastic editing, compelling subjects, and mesmerizing cinematography. One simply hopes HBO eventually releases the thing in UHD/HDR so it can be experienced in its full splendor.”  read more

Picture, Director, Actor, Supporting Actor,  Supporting Actress,  Original Screenplay, Editing, Original Score

The Banshees of Inisherin will no doubt go down as one of the most divisive films of this awards season but likely not for the reasons you might suspect, mainly because I can’t imagine anyone outright hating it. It’s one of the most captivating films of the year. No scene—indeed, no frame—is wasted and its closing credits seem to nip at the heels of its opening imagery. Then again, if you said you found it ploddingly paced, I’d have a hard time arguing with you.”    read more

Visual Effects, Sound, Makeup & Hairstyling

“At nearly three hours, the pacing is slow, and there are often long periods between the next ‘event,’ making it feel long at times. Even when it feels the film is wrapping up, there is another 30 minutes! But, while I don’t think this is the best Batman movie ever, it’s still engaging and entertaining, and director Matt Reeves gives us an interesting new take on the Dark Knight that certainly looks and sounds better when screened at home.”    read more

Actress

“Writer and director Dominik’s liberal use of artistic license and unorthodox filmmaking techniques in telling the story of the legendary Marilyn Monroe is risky. As often as it works, there are equally as many times that it comes across as lurid and cringey. Blonde is sometimes beautiful to look at, with a heroic performance by de Armas, but its content is bleak and disturbing.”    read more

Supporting Actor

Causeway may be a small film that hasn’t received much attention but it is an exquisitely crafted character study with two very fine performances by Jennifer Lawrence and Brian Tyree Henry that elevate it to something special.”    read more

Picture, Actor, Cinematography, Editing, Costume Design, Makeup & Hairstyling, Production Design

“I can’t comment on how closely the film hews to actual events, or if Colonel Tom Parker was truly as controlling and influential on Elvis Presley as the film portrays, but I did find Elvis entertaining, though a bit long at 2 hours 39 minutes. If you’re a fan of Presley or Baz Luhrmann, it’s definitely worth a watch.”    read more

Picture, Director, Actress, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, Original Screenplay, Editing, Original Score, Original Song, Costume Design

“Despite being a work of legitimate cultural significance, with a message that will still be sending shockwaves through my brain years from now, Everything Everywhere All at Once is also incredibly accessible and wildly entertaining, not to mention slap-happily zany.”    read more

Picture, Director, Actress, Supporting Actor, Original Screenplay, Original Score, Production Design

“The two-hour 31-minute run-time can be a bit plodding. Don’t expect a lot of—or really any—action other than of the emotional kind. While I found the film interesting, scenes can drag a bit. But if you’re a Spielberg fan, this is definitely a movie you’ll want to see, as it accurately depicts his early life and influences.”    read more

Documentary Feature

“Of the two documentary films cobbled together last year from footage shot by Maurice and Katia Krafft, Fire of Love is ultimately the better one. Sara Dosa doesn’t cram her own personality into the film the way Wenrer Herzog does, but she also takes a more childlike and irreverent approach that suits its subjects and subject matter better. I’d love it if you watched both because there are some ways in which Herzog’s film is superior. But if you have to pick one, make it this one, whether it wins the Oscar or not.”    read more

Adapted Screenplay

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery is lighter and breezier than the original film but with a similarly clever and intricate plot. It also features first-rate sound and picture quality, making it one of the premier streaming releases of the year.”    read more

Animated Film

“Del Toro’s Pinocchio—a re-imagining of the 1883 novel that has nothing to do with Disney’s take on the property—is a weird and wonderful, utterly soulful fantasy adventure and allegory that almost seems to have been made with no other audience in mind than del Toro himself.    read more

Animated Film

“This is such a compelling little film that anyone with a hint of tolerance for weirdness will get altogether lost in the experience. It’s refreshing to watch a movie that leans so hard into its adorableness without ignoring the difficulties we all face in life. It’s also a delightfully strange feeling to watch a film made with so much sincerity and so little cynicism. It won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, but if the original shorts resonated with you in the slightest, I think you’ll love the feature-length Marcel the Shell with Shoes On.” read more

RRR

Original Song

RRR may not have been India’s entry in the Academy Award International Feature category this year, but it is a hugely successful and highly accessible film that you don’t have to be a film connoisseur to enjoy. So check out this not so hidden gem of a film on Netflix if you haven’t already.”   read more

Animated Film

“Chris Williams’ The Sea Beast is not perfect but it brings all the charm and well-crafted storytelling of his previous efforts for Disney to his new partnership with Netflix Animation.”
read more

Picture, Director, Actress,  Original Screenplay, Cinematography, Editing

Tár can be a maddening film to watch—which makes it an even more maddening film to review. It ticks off all the trendy boxes, not just weighing in on gender politics and the blind destructive power of the howling virtual mob but also adopts a chill, distant, elliptical style that constantly holds the characters at arm’s length. Most troubling of all, it dips into the au courant fantasy realm by having certain key actions hinge on the implausible. It’s hard to take the film’s take on the contemporary world seriously or care a fig about any of its characters when it’s so willing to conveniently veer away from any kind of convincing reality.”    read more

Picture, Adapted Screenplay, Editing, Original Song, Visual Effects, Sound

Maverick is like a master class in how to make a blockbuster sequel. The casting and acting are great, the cinematography is fantastic, the plot is simple but compelling, and the action is fast-paced and (mostly) believable. And it plays terrifically in a luxury home theater. It looks and sounds great, is a near-guaranteed crowd pleaser for your next get-together, and has great replay value. In fact, I already can’t wait to watch it again, and it will likely have heavy rotation in your theater’s demo showoff reel!”    read more 

Picture, Director, Original Screenplay

“It’s nearly impossible to tell if writer/director Ruben Östlund desires to watch the ultra-wealthy suffer himself or if he simply assumes his audience is cruel and morally bankrupt. Either way, this muddled and overly long exercise in unfocused schadenfreude manages to be both shallow and thematically incoherent, callous and distant, shockingly disgusting and punishingly boring, and even its contradictions aren’t enough to make it interesting. It’s one of the most soulless and repugnant works of cinema I’ve seen in ages, and the fact that it’s getting any attention this awards season is as scathing an indictment of entertainment industry as I can imagine.”
read more

Animated Film

Turning Red seems to have critics and audiences split, with critics giving it a 95% Rotten Tomatoes rating, matching both Soul and Wall-E, and audiences scoring it a more mediocre 66%, closer to The Good Dinosaur’s 64%. While I didn’t find Turning Red to be among Pixar’s strongest outings, it’s entertaining and looks fantastic, and certainly worth checking out for Disney+ subscribers.”    read more

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Review: White Noise

White Noise (2022)

review | White Noise

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It’s nothing but a mystery why the critics are loving this irredeemable mess of a movie

by Dennis Burger
January 12, 2022

Not to go all Vanilla Ice on you here but when I see a problem, it’s my inclination to try and figure out how I would solve it. As such, when I see a truly awful film, my instinct is to brainstorm what went wrong and what could have been done to fix it. With Noah Baumbach’s White Noise¸ though, I simply have to throw my hands up and write it off as an irredeemable mess of a thing.

Some of that may be the fault of the book on which it’s based. I’m not sure, as I’ve never read it and I certainly have no reason to now. But there’s simply no denying that the bones of the story aren’t healthy. Its pace is off-putting, its structure is all out of proportion, and its ending doesn’t follow from its beginning. The fact of the matter, though, is that issues of form and narrative are just a tiny fraction of what’s wrong with this one.

A far bigger problem is that no one quite seems to know what movie they’re in. You can tell at times that actors deliver jokes they either don’t recognize as jokes or perhaps they’ve simply misunderstood (or been misinformed about) why they’re funny. Almost every single one of the adult leads delivers every line with an infuriating overwrought insincerity that holds the viewer at arm’s length for no good reason. 

There are exceptions but they end up being just as frustrating in their incongruity. The fact of the matter is that the only actors who seem to understand the material and  perform it appropriately are the children. And I spent a long time trying to decide whether to chalk this up to the fact that they’re better actors than Adam Driver, Greta Gerwig, and Don Cheadle, or perhaps simply better cast in their roles. In the end, I decided I just don’t care.

Another possibility, of course, is that the young’uns are simply too unseasoned as performers to follow bad direction, which kinda makes the most sense to me, because everything else about the production points toward Baumbach having no clue what he was doing with this, reportedly one of Netflix’ most expensive original films to date. 

I’ll say this, though: Every penny of the alleged $140-million-plus budget appears onscreen. White Noise is a gorgeous film, shot on a combination of 35mm and 65mm Kodak Vision3 stock and 6.5K Arriraw, and finished in a 4K DI. The imagery has a burnt, high-contrast look with rich saturated colors, and although there’s not a lot for the Dolby Vision high dynamic range to do in terms of shadow depth (of which there is very little), some nice specular highlights add to the depth of the image without getting out of control. It’s a bit soft overall but that works to give the production an appropriately vintage look.

The Atmos sound mix, too, is seriously well done on a technical and artistic level, with good but not overwhelming use of the surround soundfield and a focus on exceptional vocal intelligibility, which would be more appreciated if the oh-so-pretentious dialogue were worth listening to.

But it’s not. None of it. White Noise is such a fascinating dumpster fire of a motion picture that I’m almost inclined to encourage you to watch it, the way someone who has tasted something truly revolting wants you to take a bite too. You shouldn’t, though. The film isn’t half as smart as Baumbach thinks it is, and you’re nowhere near as stupid as he assumes you are. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | The imagery has a burnt, high-contrast look with rich saturated colors, and although there’s not a lot for the Dolby Vision high dynamic range to do in terms of shadow depth, some nice specular highlights add to the depth of the image

SOUND | The Atmos sound mix is well done on both a technical and artistic level, with good but not overwhelming use of the surround soundfield and a focus on exceptional vocal intelligibility

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Review: The Banshees of Inisherin

The Banshees of Inisherin (2022)

review | The Banshees of Inisherin

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This modest Irish dramedy makes for compelling viewing, especially in an HDR presentation

by Dennis Burger
January 6, 2023

The Banshees of Inisherin will no doubt go down as one of the most divisive films of this awards season but likely not for the reasons you might suspect, mainly because I can’t imagine anyone outright hating it. It’s one of the most captivating films of the year. No scene—indeed, no frame—is wasted and its closing credits seem to nip at the heels of its opening imagery. Then again, if you said you found it ploddingly paced, I’d have a hard time arguing with you. 

It’s also one of the year’s funniest, but if you never laughed once I couldn’t fault you. It’s a gorgeous work to behold, too, beautifully and deliberately composed, but if all your eyes see are the dour and dirty dinge of a rural Irish island in the 1920s, I can’t imagine even the film’s most ardent defenders giving you much grief for that. It isn’t a love-it-or-hate-it affair but rather a sort of love-it-or-meh-whatever. But I imagine the gulf between those two camps will be far wider than typically exists for movies of the sort that prompt screaming matches and flame wars in the darker alleyways of the internet.

And to be frank, I haven’t a clue how to help you sort yourself into one camp or the other before giving it a shot. It’s the kind of film that defies algorithms, largely because it can’t be pre-masticated into this-movie-meets-that-movie pabulum. The story, though, is simplicity incarnate: Grappling with the weight of his own eventual mortality, a musician named Colm (portrayed by Brendan Gleeson) decides that he no longer wishes to be friends with his longtime pub-pal Pádraic (Colin Farrell), not over any sort of disagreement or falling out but purely because he finds time spent with the dull farmer wasted. When Pádraic tries to reconcile or at least get to the bottom of his former friend’s mental state, Colm threatens to start lopping off his own fingers. 

That’s it. That’s the plot. What makes it work, though—what makes it sustainable for two hours—is that writer/director Martin McDonagh (Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri) has found a way to combine a distinctively Irish form of ennui and humor with the sense of negative space and appreciation for the mundane you would expect from Miyazaki Hayao’s best films—which Miyazaki himself often describes as “ma.” 

Banshees is also the rare allegorical tale that doesn’t feel the need to whap you over the head with its meaning at every turn. It respects the intelligence of its audience enough to pick up what it’s laying down, even when it’s laying down a lot. It is, most blatantly, an allegory for the Irish Civil War that’s constantly raging concurrently just across the channel on the mainland but also for arms races in general and struggles with mental health. It’s as much about a man’s relationship with his pet miniature donkey as it is about the tortured soul of an artist. In the end, one of the most fascinating things about the film is how much it manages to be about despite how little happens.

Given how uncertain I am about how anyone might receive The Banshees of Inisherin, once I finished watching it on Kaleidescape my first instinct was to suggest streaming it for free on HBO Max, where it’s currently available in HD. That was largely a consequence of the fact that the film’s UHD/HDR presentation seemed mostly unnecessary to me. Aside from a handful of bright sunlight skies that are just this side of eye-reactive, I didn’t see much benefit of the higher resolution and especially not the HDR10 grading. A few minutes spent comparing the HDR10 version to the HD version also available on Kaleidescape, as well as the HD stream on HBO Max, disabused me of that notion quickly. 

This is one of the most subtly effective HDR presentations I’ve seen in quite some time, not because it boosts the brightness or deepens the shadows, but more because it gives the value scale more room to breathe across the board. In HD, so many of the highlights are clipped that you lose depth, not only in the sky but also in the streaks of sun reflecting off the water surrounding the fictional island of Inisherin. The HD presentation feels flat, dull, processed, whereas the UHD/HDR10 download from Kaleidescape brims with effortless dimensionality.

The film’s palette, too, gets a huge-but-not-obvious boost from the HDR10 grade. That makes sense given that it was shot digitally in Arriraw at 4.5K, but even armed with that knowledge, the differences between the SDR and HDR presentations are staggering in a way you wouldn’t appreciate if all you’ve seen is the latter. Colors aren’t simply richer and more saturated; at times, they’re more subdued, more pastel. Greens that tend toward Crayola in the HD presentation benefit from a low-key injection of warmth and nuance in UHD/HDR. Skin tones are less patchy. Painted windowsills not only read as more obviously painted but also more weatherworn. The whole world of The Banshees of Inisherin simply gets an infusion of verisimilitude by way of HDR that is as lovely as it is subliminal. 

Kaleidescape also delivers the film with a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track, which really only crawls out of its center-speaker shell occasionally to add some space to the music and the occasional atmospheric sound effect or the rare exchange of distant gunfire. For viewers who aren’t Irish, I would imagine the most appreciated thing about the mix is that dialogue is kept clean and clear and always perfectly intelligible, which is no mean feat.

The download comes with a handful of extras, the most noteworthy of which is the 18-minute Creating The Banshees of Inisherin, a brief but insightful behind-the-scenes featurette that puts the film in the context of McDonagh’s other work, specifically his plays The Cripple of Inishmaan and The Lieutenant of Inishmore, which formed the first two parts of a loose and unofficial trilogy that concludes (for now) with this film. There are also five deleted scenes adding up to just under as many minutes, each of which represents a lovely little character moment in itself but all of which would have been a little redundant or on-the-nose in the context of the finished film. 

You can probably skip the deleted scenes unless you’re fascinated by the structure of film and want to get some insight into McDonagh’s editing choices. You can even skip the making-of doc if you’re not a prior fan of the filmmaker. But if you’re at all interested in The Banshees of Inisherin, I’d encourage you not to merely stream it on HBO Max or whatever service is serving it up by the time you read this. This one legitimately loses something in HD and especially in 8-bit dynamic range. It deserves better. I cannot tell you whether it will resonate with you, of course, but for now it’s my second favorite film of 2022.

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | Kaleidescape’s subtly effective HDR presentation gives the movie an infusion of verisimilitude that is as lovely as it is subliminal

SOUND | The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track really only crawls out of its center-speaker shell occasionally to add some space to the music and the occasional atmospheric sound effect

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Review: God’s Crooked Lines

God's Crooked Lines (2022)

review | God’s Crooked Lines

The English version of this Spanish psychological thriller would be far more compelling if the dubbing wasn’t so bad 

by Dennis Burger
December 28, 2022

It was my intent to begin by saying that God’s Crooked Lines (aka Los renglones torcidos de Dios) feels a bit like two separate decks of cards shuffled together by a seasoned croupier, but that doesn’t quite tell the whole story. In its original language, yes, that still feels true. Switch over to the laughably awful English dub available on Netflix, though, and it feels more like someone threw an Uno deck into a half-packed Cards Against Humanity box and gave it a perfunctory shake. So, in a sense, you have four movies in one here, although it’s really only worth watching in the original Spanish. If you’re allergic to subtitles, give this one a hard pass.

The reason that matters here even more than with most films is that God’s Crooked Lines largely lives or dies by its performances. It’s an interesting narrative, mind you, with gripping twists and turns, and one that blurs the lines between genres and serves as a textbook on the distinctions between tension and suspense—but it’s nearly impossible to invest in that narrative when the voices coming out of the characters’ mouths don’t seem like they could possibly have emanated from those characters’ bodies. 

As for what the film is about, it’s tempting to describe it in reference to other films. It comes across at times as a cross between Gaslight and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, with the subtlest hints of The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari thrown in for seasoning. More plainly, it’s the story of a woman who enters a psychiatric hospital under the pretense of solving a crime and her conflicts with the asylum director, the only authority who doesn’t buy her story. 

I won’t say much more than that about the plot because it’s the sort of film that leaves the viewer guessing about what is real and what isn’t, who the reliable narrator is, if there is one, and even the order in which narrative events unfold at times. Frankly, it should be an exhausting film, especially given its 155-minute runtime. But it never crumbles under its own narrative weight and zips right by, largely due to the performances, especially those of Bárbara Lennie and Eduard Fernández, both of whom are hypnotic in every frame they occupy.  

It’s also such a visually fascinating film that the eye cannot help but remain engaged. Unfortunately, I can’t say much about the way in which it was shot given that IMDb and the film’s closing credits both lack technical specifications but it was obviously shot digitally despite a rather filmic look. It some respects, it evokes the character of a less-contrasty Kodachrome, a film stock no commercial motion picture was ever shot on to my knowledge. What’s curious, though, is that much of the tonal and chromatic character of the imagery seems to come from the lenses, not any sort of film-look post-processing. If there was much of the latter, it was done with a careful hand. But given that I don’t know what the negative format was nor what lenses might have been used (aside from the fact that they’re obviously anamorphic), I’m left with little but speculation.

We can agree on this, though: Netflix’ video presentation is flawless. The Dolby Vision grading doesn’t feature intense specular highlights and it’s never eye-reactive, but it does seem to enhance shadow detail. There were times when I was shocked the relatively high-efficiency HEVC encode was able to keep up with the combination of difficult-to-encode elements—one scene involving a raging fire at night during a thunderstorm comes to mind as particularly impressive demo material that has every right to look a mess but doesn’t. The UHD resolution is also employed to good effect to enhance the textures of the architecture and clothing and natural environments around the hospital.

The Dolby Atmos presentation is also equally engaging although perhaps not as consistent. From time to time, it does get a little too aggressive with the surround effects, and the overhead channels can, on rare occasions, distract from the onscreen drama. 

More often than not, though, the mix serves to enhance the ambiance of the environments, such as with the hum of the hospital’s fluorescent lamps, and to heighten the psychological drama, such as when Alicia/Alice enters her own mind palace to try to unravel the mysteries of her past and present circumstances. There’s a wonderful dreamlike quality to the mix in those scenes that works to their advantage.

Again, though, when it comes to the execrable English dub, take everything I said in the preceding paragraph and defenestrate it. The poorly cast and inappropriately performed voiceover work piddles all over everything good about the mix.

It’s really a shame such a worthwhile film wasn’t given a better dub for those who don’t enjoy subtitles. And that’s not to say God’s Crooked Lines is perfect or even the best mystery film of December 2022. It doesn’t quite rise to the level of Oriol Paulo’s best previous effort, 2016’s The Invisible Guest, largely as a result of the somewhat cluttered and disjointed climax and a few narrative threads that could have stood to be tightened up in one final pass at the script. If you’re a fan of psychological thrillers, though, don’t be scared off by the fact that this one doesn’t quite stick the landing. Far more about it works than doesn’t. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | The Dolby Vision grading in Netflix’ flawless video presentation doesn’t feature intense specular highlights and is never eye-reactive but does seem to enhance shadow detail, while the UHD resolution is employed to good effect to enhance textures

SOUND | The Atmos presentation is equally engaging though not as consistent, occasionally getting a little too aggressive with the surround effects, which can cause the overhead channels to distract from the onscreen drama

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Review: Pulp Fiction

Pulp Fiction (1994)

review | Pulp Fiction

The Tarantino classic gets a 4K HDR upgrade that stays remarkably true to its elegantly gritty filmic look

by Dennis Burger
December 19, 2022

It’s funny how watching a beloved film with a critical eye rather than through a fan’s rose-tinted glasses will force you to articulate things you’ve always been perfectly happy to leave nebulous. I’ve frankly never given much thought to why Pulp Fiction is one of only three Tarantino films I genuinely adore. I’ve made vague allusions to the off-putting cruelty of Reservoir Dogs and Inglourious Basterds, the meandering self-indulgence of Jackie Brown, the unflinching sadism of Django Unchained and The Hateful Eight—in short, I have excuses for why I’m bothered by the films of his that bother me, and I still haven’t entirely made my mind up about Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. But I’ve never even stopped to seriously consider why Pulp Fiction, Kill Bill, and Death Proof resonate so hard with me.

I think I found a clue in the opening credits during this, what must have been my 50th viewing of Tarantino’s sophomore directorial effort: “Stories by Quentin Tarantino & Roger Avary.” You don’t see a lot of ampersands in Tarantino’s opening or closing credits sequences, at least not as pertains to story or script. But it turns out the only films of his that truly work for me are, in some way or another, collaborative in their original conception.

It’s difficult to deny that Pulp Fiction holds a special spot in the filmmaker’s oeuvre, and that Avary’s contributions—primarily the story of boxer Butch Coolidge, played by Bruce Willis—give the narrative a little more heart and humanity than is typical of Tarantino’s work. But it’s also difficult to deny the quotability of nearly every line of dialogue, the effectiveness of the near-constant dark humor, nor the exceptional plotting and pacing, all of which QT deserves credit for. 

I’m guessing at the mere mention of the name of the film, many cinephiles of a certain vintage can immediately recall its most salient elements. But Pulp Fiction is one of those rare modern films in which the individual parts and the sum thereof are of relatively equal merit. Its moments may be burned into your memory but how they unfold and entangle and interconnect from one to the next is the bulk of the reason for the enduring power of Pulp Fiction to surprise and delight nearly any time you watch it. 

Mind you, that’s true of the film whether you watch it on Laserdisc, VHS, DVD, Blu-ray, or the new UHD/HDR release from, of all studios, Paramount, a fact that unnerved me when I realized it. The studio doesn’t have the most consistent track record when it comes to 4K remasters so there’s the obvious question of whether you’re going to end up with a Godfather or a Godfather Part II. 

Thankfully, it’s the latter. Granted, the elements of Pulp Fiction are newer and have been much better preserved, but it looks like aside from recompositing some titles, the only thing the restorers and graders behind this new release did was scan the negative, set the peak brightness level at something resembling the intensity of projected film, and pat themselves on the back for a job not done. 

Which is, exactly how it ought to be. Pulp Fiction in 4K positively brims with organic but exceedingly fine grain and the sort of gorgeous halation you get with 35mm film. The golden hues of its Eastman stock haven’t been diddled with a bit, most of the expanded dynamic range comes from the lower end of the value scale, and the color palette just has a weensy bit more room to breathe without bumping into the limits of the smaller gamut of older home video formats.

In short, this release just looks like film, and although Kaleidescape’s release is limited to HDR10, I’m not seeing anything here that would benefit from the dynamic metadata of the Dolby Vision version released on UHD Blu-ray and iTunes. What I am seeing is a wealth of textures and details that legitimately add to the experience of watching the film. It’s not razor-sharp and shouldn’t be—thank goodness no one saw fit to scrub and sharpen the film once it was scanned, and even the minor amount of edge enhancement found on the most recent Blu-ray seems to be missing—but it’s now easier to see little elements that have been obscured by previous home video releases. The tiny details to be found in Jack Rabbit Slim’s now read so clearly that Vince’s line, “It’s like a wax museum with a pulse,” lands so much harder because it feels so much truer. And it’s hard not to miss the grime on the walls of Butch’s grimy motel room now, nor the title of Modesty Blaise the first time we see Vince clutching it.

The enhanced and unfettered detail of this new scan also more clearly reveals the character of the medium at times. As Butch and Esmeralda Villalobos speed away from his final fight in the latter’s cab, you can see cinematographer Andrzej Sekula struggling to pull focus while trying to capture fast-moving action at night with an anamorphic lens. Later, you can more clearly see the artifacts of the split diopter as Butch runs around a corner to hide from a distant Marsellus Wallace and both have to remain in focus.

Far from distracting from the experience, though, these little quirks serve as a technical indicator of something Tarantino is constantly reminding us of with narrative and other cinematic techniques: There’s a reason this film wasn’t called Based on a True Story. This isn’t how real life works. This is pastiche. This is homage. And there’s something curious about the fact that a pristine scan of the original elements, which makes the imagery more three-dimensional and beautifully resolved than ever before, legitimately serves to subtly enhance and underscore the inherent and intentional tawdry artifice of it all. 

The only thing I would change about the presentation is the audio. And no, I don’t want a new Dolby Atmos remix. But I do think Pulp Fiction would benefit from a new nearfield mix specifically for home cinema. 

Kaleidescape’s DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track sounds identical to the one found on all of the film’s sundry Blu-ray releases, and it’s pretty great overall. It’s wonderfully dynamic and, due to QT’s disdain for ADR, all of the dialogue has a natural  “in the room” quality I dig quite a bit. You’ll push your center speaker to its limits, and if your sound system is up to snuff, you’ll even notice some little character flaws like the saturation-verging-on-clipping of Sam Jackson’s voice as he forcefully yells his mangled Biblical mantra at the soon-to-be-ex-Brett.  

The only problem with the sound is that the surround channels are mixed for a room that’s 50 feet wide or more, not 25 feet or less. They’re a bit too high in the mix and occasionally impose on not only dialogue but also the sense of scale. It’s not a major deal—it’s 95% of the way there as is. But a good nearfield re-recording mixer could have transformed this release from near-perfect to transcendental. 

One other nit to pick is that Paramount is being precious with its bonus features again. The Kaleidescape release lacks all of the bonus goodies found on the new UHD Blu-ray, which to be fair were pulled from the original special edition DVD and a couple of subsequent Blu-ray releases. You can find most of them on YouTube, but it would be nice to have the deleted scenes and especially the retrospective feature Not the Usual Mindless Boring Getting to Know You Chit Chat collected with the film itself. 

So if you own an older copy of the film that includes those supplements, perhaps hang onto it. But one way or another, if you’re a fan of Pulp Fiction, you need to see this new scan, and Kaleidescape’s download is an excellent way of acquiring it. 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | Pulp Fiction in 4K positively brims with organic but exceedingly fine grain and the sort of gorgeous halation you get with 35mm film. It also offers a wealth of textures and details that legitimately add to the experience of watching the film.

SOUND | The DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track is pretty great overall but the surround channels are mixed for a room that’s 50 feet wide or more, not 25 feet or less

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Theater of Legends

Theater of Legends

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Mike Vernazza, MAV Cinema

This no-expense-spared castles & dragons fantasy realm is also a no-holds-barred home theater

by Dennis Burger
December 15, 2022

The owner of this fantasy-themed room in the Nashville area had previously made headlines with a home cinema inspired by his love of HBO’s Game of Thrones. Starting from scratch in a new theater for a new home, though, he wanted to try something just a bit different. When he approached Richard Charschan, president and CEO of AcousticSmart Home Theatre Interiors, to begin the discussions that eventually led to this space, he decided he wanted to add elements from another beloved epic, The Lord of the Rings, to the design. But just as importantly, according to Charschan, “He wanted it to be a little Disney-like, akin to the themed lines at Disney World that make you forget where you are and prepare the viewer for a whole new experience.”

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Mike Vernazza, MAV Cinema

As the room’s design evolved, Charschan and his team also made modifications to account for the homeowner’s vast hoard of collectibles—including converting what was originally conceived as a gym behind the room into a showcase for some of his favorite pieces. 

One of the most distinctive elements, though, is a pair of TVs installed in portrait mode on the side wall to mimic castle windows built into a custom window frame. The real magic comes from a macro that triggers a script on the room’s Kaleidescape movie server so that before a movie starts, the lights dim and dragons appear on the screen, looking like they’re attacking the castle from outside. “The idea was to mimic the end of Game of Thrones, where they’re looking out of the castle and the dragons are blowing everything up,” Charschan said. “He’s big into dragons so we wanted to make it seem like they were really outside. It’s only for a few seconds, just to give you a taste of the entertainment experience to come.”

The literal centerpiece of the room, though, is the two rows of custom seating, three to a row. The owner wanted seating fit for a castle and worked with Charschan on the sketches that would then lead to photorealistic renderings and eventually the final design. Perfecting the design, which also incorporated the owner’s family insignia embroidered on each chair, was no easy task, especially given that the seats feature articulating headrests and a low-profile design that doesn’t block the sound from the surround speakers. “He’s an audiophile,” Charschan said, “so he wouldn’t accept something that interfered with his surround sound.”

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But just as important was the comfort of the seating. “Toward the end of the project, he started to express concerns about whether the chairs would be comfortable enough since he’d never had a chance to sit in them beforehand. To ensure the seating exceeded expectations, we hand-selected every different piece of foam and made sure every aspect of his seat was ergonomically perfect for him. That’s the kind of thing you can only get from a custom house like ours.”

Along with amping up the design, the owner also wanted to take the performance of the theater to a new level—literally. While his previous cinema boasted a 7.2-channel speaker system by Pro Audio Technology, with this room he wanted a Dolby Atmos system to extend the surround-sound experience into the height domain. New audio processing by Storm Audio and a new Pro Audio Technology Atmos speaker system—installed by Jacob Abbott of Visual Concepts and tuned by Pro Audio’s Mark Goldman—accomplished this goal. 

The cinema may look like a somewhat compromised acoustical environment what with the castle-themed stone walls and floors. But as it turns out, most of that stone isn’t stone at all. “The walls are made out of acoustically transparent fabric we call Smart Art,” Charschan said. “It looks so real because we loaded the images into 3D Studio Max to upgrade the depth and resolution to get the detail just right. It took us a little over two months to get it perfect. Even when you’re sitting in the room, you don’t realize it’s not real stone.”

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The printed Smart Art fabric also hides a mix of absorptive and diffusive acoustic treatments, which were selected and specified to account for the fact that the floor is made up of hard surfaces featuring a faux stone concept. “We installed stamped concrete that made you feel like you’re really walking into a castle. In the type of environment we were trying to replicate, you wouldn’t have carpeting, so we carved the concrete to look like stone and also incorporated some family insignias into the flooring.”

The more sonically reflective surfaces of the floor were then carefully factored into the acoustical analysis of the space, and the team compensated by adding extra absorption into the walls and ceiling, including heavy draperies. “As long as you take the square footage of the space into account and know how much absorption you need, you can calculate the reverb time correctly with a complicated environment like this,” Charschan said. “The one thing you have to be careful about is going too far the other way. Too much absorption and the room can sound way too dead, even with concrete floors. But this one worked out nicely because luckily the shape  is a nice long rectangular shape with decent height.” 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

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Review: Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio

Pinocchio (2022)

review | Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio

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Del Toro comes up with a compelling reimagining that exists in a universe miles apart from Disney’s animated and live-action takes on the children’s story

by Dennis Burger
December 12, 2022

It’s hard to think of two recent films so diametrically opposed as Guillermo del Toro’s new stop-motion adaptation of Pinocchio and the soulless Disney+ “live action” remake of the 1940 animated classic. The latter constantly begs you to marvel at its technological prowess, although it’s hard to imagine anyone involved was proud of any other aspect of this pandering, phone-it-in cash-grab of a production. Del Toro’s Pinocchio, on the other hand—a re-imagining of the 1883 novel that has nothing to do with Disney’s take on the property—is a weird and wonderful, utterly soulful fantasy adventure and allegory that almost seems to have been made with no other audience in mind than del Toro himself. 

Adapted by del Toro, along with co-writer Matthew Robbins and co-screenwriter Patrick McHale, the story unsurprisingly takes on shades of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, but perhaps the biggest change to the source material is that the filmmakers have transposed the action to 1930s Fascist Italy for reasons that become clearer as the narrative progresses and the themes start to congeal.

If you’re looking for a faithful adaptation of Carlo Collodi’s serialized novel, this isn’t it. If you’re looking for light children’s entertainment, it’s not that, either. In a sense, it reads more like a spiritual sequel to Pan’s Labyrinth. That isn’t to say it isn’t child-friendly but rather that the children most likely to be drawn in by it are the ones who stay up late watching classic Universal monster movies under the blankets and always identified more with the monsters, or grownups who never let that strange child within them grow up completely. As I said, del Toro made this movie for him, not for you, and as the two hours of fantastical animation unfold on the screen, you can practically feel the passion he’s poured into this project for the past 14 or 15 years. 

Granted, that does occasionally lead to a bit of indulgence. Ten or 15 minutes probably could have been cut from the script in the storyboarding stage to tighten things up, especially in the second act. And a couple of the songs do feel like padding. But any such grievances are long forgotten by the film’s end, when del Toro and his colleagues—including co-director Mark Gustafson—bring things to such a satisfying narrative, emotional, and thematic conclusion that you’ll likely find yourself grinning through sobs and tears. 

No doubt, Netflix’ presentation helps sell the constructed reality. It does take the eyes and brain a scene or two to adjust to the fact that the film wasn’t animated on the ones, and some of the camerawork is so good as to be distracting—one simply doesn’t take that for granted in a stop-motion film—but by the time the somewhat Up-esque prologue has finished playing out, you’ll have bought into it all completely. Dolby Vision is used here not to dazzle you or stress-test your display but rather to replicate the quality of natural light, especially during golden-hour shots or in interiors punctuated by stray beams from the sun or the cool glow of the moon. 

The film is so packed with texture that you’d expect there to be some aliasing or moiré here and there even with the 4K resolution, but you couldn’t ask for better in terms of detail or clarity. That’s especially important when it comes to appreciating the film’s incredible sets as well as some of the character design, which do a lot of the heavy lifting in terms of unspoken storytelling—such as the differences in the quality of sculpting as you move from the left side of Pinocchio’s carved and chiseled pine head, which becomes sloppier and more unfinished as the drunken Geppetto slid closer to involuntary unconsciousness while working on him. 

The Dolby Atmos soundtrack also does a magnificent job of enhancing immersion without devolving into spectacle, even during the most intense action set-pieces. There’s a lot of exceptionally delicate panning here, as voices move across the front soundstage instead of being locked into the center. If your sound system is up to snuff and properly calibrated, you might not even notice, but it goes a long way toward selling the illusion that this story is unfolding in a legitimately three-dimensional world.

What you will notice, though, is how the sound mixers use the surround soundfield to not only add ambiance but also draw a meaningful distinction between the material and the immaterial, especially with the voice of The Wood Sprite and her sister Death, both voiced by Tilda Swinton.

As the credits rolled and my wife and I tried to discreetly remove the tears from our cheeks and the snot from our noses, I’ll admit that for a brief moment I lamented that this was a Netflix production. It’s deserving of some curated bonus features and perhaps even an audio commentary. And while it doesn’t get the latter, it is accompanied by a half-hour making-of featurette called Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio: Handcarved Cinema that starts, unfortunately, as the sort of puff-piece promotional EPK that’s far too common in the world of behind-the-scenes material, packed to the gills with superlatives and platitudes and nothing of substance. As the featurette unfolds, though, we get some deep insight into not only the long journey of adapting the story and designing the film but also the animation process itself. It’s pure gold for fans of stop-motion animation and not to be missed.

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | You couldn’t ask for better detail or clarity from the 4K resolution, and Dolby Vision is used not to dazzle you or stress-test your display but rather to replicate the quality of natural light  

SOUND | The Atmos soundtrack does a magnificent job of enhancing immersion without devolving into spectacle, even during the most intense action set-pieces

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Hidden Treasure

Hidden Treasure

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getting the private cinema profiled in spanish treasure to sound its best meant digging deep into the tricks of the acoustic trade 

BY DENNIS BURGER

November 30, 2022

“The eye doesn’t always tell you the flavor of the room,” says Anthony Grimani, former director of technology for THX and founder of Performance Media Industries, who was responsible for making this gorgeous private cinema sound the way it sounds. 

This was in response to a pretty simple but open-ended question from me: “How?”

How, for example, does this space feature a complete Dolby Atmos sound system with six overhead speakers—not to mention 11 ear-level speakers and four powerful subwoofers—when a quick glance at the ceiling reveals not merely a complete lack of obvious speaker grilles but rows upon rows of hand-painted and antiqued wooden panels adorned with crests instead? 

How does the tryptic back wall, with a shape not unlike the outfield wall of a baseball stadium, not reflect and concentrate sound back toward the seating area like a satellite dish? How, for that matter, do all the plaster and brick walls not create the sort of echoey and reverberant sound you’d typically hear in a room with so many hard surfaces? Look around and you’ll see none of the heavily draperied walls or acoustical treatments typically found all over private cinema spaces.

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Wylie Carter Architects

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Slayman Cinema

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“The surfaces in this room are not what they appear to be,” Grimani says. Starting from the top, he tells me that a number of the wooden crests in the ceiling were “knocked out, photographed, printed with dye sublimation onto an acoustically transparent fabric, then repositioned. Some of those panels hid speakers. Some of them hid acoustical treatments. So, half the ceiling is wood and the other half is fake, but you can’t tell. You walk in the room and the printing is so well-executed that it just looks real. To the naked eye, there’s just no way to know.”

In a sense, all of this makes this room a truly apt metaphor for cinema at its best. Like movies themselves, this private screening room relies on visual trickery and a lot of technical wizardry—special effects, if you will. And as with cinema, the best visual effects are the ones you don’t even realize are visual effects. They’re the ones you take for granted. 

Take the matter of acoustical treatments around the room as another example. Any good screening room needs the right balance of two types of treatment, referred to as “absorption” and “diffusion.” In practice, it’s a lot more complicated than that, but if you understand those two concepts, you’re at least conversant in the fundamentals of what makes some rooms sound good and others sound less good, at least for the purposes of watching films. 

Acoustical plaster gives the impression of being a typical stucco surface but actually allows sound to pass through to materials meant absorb and reflect sound, located beneath 

Without enough absorption, a room will sound like a basketball court, more so the more reflective surfaces it has. Too much absorption, though, and it starts to sound dead and lifeless—perhaps even a bit unnerving. 

And not only is finding the right amount of absorption important; you also need to distribute your absorptive sound treatments evenly around the room. Absorb too much sound in the front or rear, Grimani says, and “your ear/brain senses that as a black hole of sound energy; your attention is drawn to it. It doesn’t match our auditory radar. So it’s better to have a layout where the absorption is consistently distributed all the way around the room.”

You also want to create some diffusion—or scattering—of the sound that would otherwise reflect directly off the hard surfaces of the room. The placement of these diffusive treatments is equally important. “Some diffusion on the lateral surfaces on the side walls is good,” Grimani says, “since it gives you a sensation that the room is bigger than it really is.” Too much diffusion in the wrong places, though, and it “confuses the hell out of your senses.”

As for the physical makeup of these treatments, there’s a range of materials used to create absorption and diffusion—but nowhere on that list will you find plaster or brick. So where did they hide the treatments in this room? Behind the plaster. Behind the brick. And no, that didn’t involve dye-sub printing fabric panels to look like plaster and brick.

“The magic we used here was something called Baswa Phon acoustical plaster,” Grimani says. “The idea is that you lay up a few inches of relatively dense fiberglass or rockwool, then you trowel on this porous plaster, which lets the sound through. So while your eyes see plaster, the sound waves pass right through it and get soaked up by the fibrous material. So that’s part of the trickery.” 

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The brick walls along the sides and rear also hide secrets—in the back of the room specifically, two large subwoofers positioned and calibrated to complement another two subs behind the screen at the front. “You can’t tell from the pictures but the grout between the bricks was selected for its porousness,” Grimani says. “We also have fiberglass put right behind the grout. The area between the bricks is actually absorptive, so while this all looks like hard surfaces that would be a giant amplifying echo box—a parabola focusing all these reflections back at you—the room actually has a very natural acoustic character.” 

The other key to making this room sound the way it does was reliance on Grimani Systems’ own powered speakers, which he convinced integrator Bradford Wells to use after a private audition. (In fact, it was Wells who brought Grimani into this project and handled all of the client interaction.) The speakers were engineered with spaces like this in mind. Due to their design, Grimani has precise control over how each driver in each speaker interacts with the other, which gives him more control over how each speaker delivers sound into the room. The goal is to make sure that whether you’re listening to the speaker from directly in front of it or off to the side, it doesn’t sound radically different. 

This means that any sound that does bounce off the walls, ceiling, and floor has the same character as the sound reaching your ears directly. “What’s more important than focusing on the Grimani Systems label on these speakers,” he tells me, “is to state the importance of having a speaker with even sound power. That will help ensure good sonic results”

The state-of-the-art speaker system, the room tuning, the hidden acoustics, the climate control vents engineered to keep air velocity low to minimize the noise therefrom—all of it adds up to just one piece of the puzzle that makes this room work. Probably the most important piece is the collaborative effort of all the trades involved in the project.

“All successful theaters have to exist as the perfect combination of beautiful architecture, gorgeous design, and meticulous engineering,” Grimani says, “so that the picture and sound are all reference quality—meaning that a film director and sound mixer could come in and say, ‘Yep! That’s the picture and sound as I created them.’ The room also has to be carefully built to follow the rules set forth by the engineering and design and architecture. The team has to work together as a group to make that happen. Pull all that off and you end up with a crazy-happy client.”

So was the client crazy-happy? I couldn’t help but ask. 

“It’s funny,” Grimani replies. “He said he originally thought he’d use the room once or twice a month but he’s down there every night.” 

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

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“All successful theaters have to exist as the perfect combination of beautiful architecture, gorgeous design, and meticulous engineering.”

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Review: Three Thousand Years of Longing

Three Thousand Years of Longing (2022)

review | Three Thousand Years of Longing

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George Miller’s meditation on folklore, myth, and storytelling almost works but falls just short of its goals 

by Dennis Burger
November 4, 2022

I spent most of George Miller’s Three Thousand Years of Longing consumed by thoughts of “bukimi no tani genshō,” aka “The Uncanny Valley.” The term, on the off chance you’re not familiar with it, is often used to describe our discomfort with 3D animations, especially of humans, that are almost lifelike but just miss the mark. And indeed, there’s a lot of 3D animation in this film that’s almost excellent, but that’s not the main reason I struggled so much.

Instead, I think it’s because Miller almost made a really wonderful film here but dropped the ball in a few key areas. For one thing, Three Thousand Years of Longing purports to be a story about the value of storytelling. Indeed, it’s an adaptation of A.S. Byatt’s excellent short story, The Djinn in the Nightingale’s Eye, from the collection of the same name. 

The thing is, if you’re going to tell a tale about the power of tales, then the tale you’re telling needs to be powerfully told, and there’s just something a little too detached about the way Miller tells this one for it to truly resonate. It falls prey to its own criticisms, approaching folklore and mythology a bit too analytically and intellectually, with not nearly enough heart. This despite the fact that leads Tilda Swinton and Idris Elba give it their all. The reality is, the trappings and style of the film—combined with the way it was shot—make their best efforts seem merely almost sincere, almost heartfelt.

The biggest thing working against this film’s humanity is its visuals. Shot by an out-of-retirement John Seale at 4.5K in ArriRaw, and finished in a 4K digital intermediate, the imagery hasn’t been film-looked at all. No faux grain, no synthesized halation, just straight, pristine, impossibly sharp out-of-the-box video with a bit of color grading. And while that unvarnished look works well for the scenes in which Swinton and Elba merely sit in the same room and speak to one another, when there’s any digital effects work—and there almost always is—the shocking clarity of the picture shines a laser beam on the disquieting nigh-verisimilitude of the computer graphics. 

Even the most banal FX work—a composite of Swinton’s character riding a bus through the streets of London, for example—isn’t quite stylized enough to register as intentionally stylized but isn’t quite believable enough to fool the eye. Every shot involving any amount of compositing also looks more like a popup book than a proper motion picture. But that doesn’t seem to be an intentional aesthetic choice. So we’re left with this weird middle ground where the viewer can’t quite buy into the fairy-tale reality of the story.

The one major exception is the sound. This is, without question, the best Dolby Atmos mix of the year so far and Kaleidescape presents it wonderfully. It’s an aggressive one, and I know I’m on record as not liking those, but what makes it work is that sound designer/supervising sound editor Robert Mackenzie demonstrates a masterful understanding of the way our brains process audio in the real world, and as such the mix doesn’t feel like it’s glomming to every surface of the room. Instead, it uses sound to transform the listening space. 

I’ll give you just one example—one of my favorites. Early on, there’s a lecture being given in an auditorium, and the mix employs Atmos to excellent effect to recreate the acoustics of the space. But it’s not voices merely bouncing off the ceiling and the walls that makes it work—it’s the timing of such. There’s a delay between the reverberance of the ceiling and the reverberance of the rear wall that’s absolutely transformative. 

Creative intermixing of sound effects both diegetic and dramatic provides some much-needed glue I wish had been mimicked in other areas of the making of the film. Had the script benefited from one more pass to reinforce the themes and trim some fat, and had the finished digital intermediate been printed to 35mm then scanned back to digital to smooth over some of the razor-sharp edges and add some organic chaos, I think Three Thousand Years of Longing could have really worked. 

In its released state, though, it teeters right on the edge of “noble failure” territory. It’s not a failure, mind you. In fact, it’s one of the year’s most ambitious and fascinating major-studio releases. But the fact that it comes so close to being something special without crossing that threshold makes it incredibly frustrating.

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

PICTURE | The imagery hasn’t been film-looked at all—just impossibly sharp video with a bit of color grading, which shines a laser beam on the flaws in the computer graphics

SOUND | The best Atmos mix of the year so far—an aggressive one, but it doesn’t feel like it’s glomming to every surface of the room, instead using sound to transform the listening space 

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Video Walls Go Boutique

Video Walls Go Boutique

Video Walls Go Boutique

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Video walls from the mainstream brands remain a big investment, but that doesn’t mean they’ve worked out all the bugs yet

by Dennis Burger
October 31, 2022

It’s not hard to understand why people lust after video walls. These modular, direct-view screens combine the scale and scope of a traditional projector & screen setup with the viewing flexibility and brightness of TVs. But even though they come mainly from mass-market brands like Sony and Samsung, there’s nothing mass-market about their sizes—or their prices. And while they’re the hottest thing going in luxury home-entertainment spaces, we’ve been hearing reports from the field that there can be problems with both quality and reliability. 

Mind you, that’s to be expected with any new display technology. When OLED TVs first became available a decade ago, those tiny but exorbitantly priced screens had the life expectancy of a goldfish won with a ping pong toss at a county fair. Fast-forward to 2022 and OLEDs are ubiquitous. But LG and other OLED manufacturers had one advantage the makers of LED video walls don’t—economies of scale. In other words, the need to keep up with the tremendous demand for OLEDs spurred the technology to evolve more quickly.

But the six-figure price of admission for video walls—a number unlikely to come down any time soon—has led to them just beginning to appear in high-end homes. And given that they’ve been released into the wild before being fully weaned, issues have emerged with performance and reliability, leading to some smaller, more boutique companies offering a more custom approach to these high-end displays. 

One of the companies working to make video walls more viable is Quantum Media Systems, which recently launched its customized Cinematic XDR LED video wall, designed to address the issues that specifically affect luxury entertainment spaces. By investing in upgraded electronics, processing, and image-enhancement and heat-mitigation technology (important, given that most video walls seem to generate more heat than light), QMS has developed an expandable, highly customizable wall that can be configured for virtually any screen size and shape. 

Quantum claims its display systems can deliver color rendering and brightness as good as high-performance HDR TVs, and that it can achieve screen sizes every bit as big as a two-piece projection system, but with only four inches of space required behind the screen. What’s more, because the Cinematic XDR LED video wall produces as much light as it does, its image can be clearly seen even in fully sunlit rooms.

LED walls will inevitably shed their training wheels and continue to improve as time goes on—although perhaps not as quickly as other residential video-display technologies. In the meantime, companies like Quantum will attempt to bridge the performance and reliability gaps with highly customized premium offerings like the Cinematic XDR.

Dennis Burger is an avid Star Wars scholar, Tolkien fanatic, and Corvette enthusiast who somehow also manages to find time for technological passions including high-end audio, home automation, and video gaming. He lives in the armpit of Alabama with his wife Bethany and their four-legged child Bruno, a 75-pound American Staffordshire Terrier who thinks he’s a Pomeranian.

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