Warning: This Blu-ray does not come out this week and made its home market debut on the 15th. However, the screener arrived late, hence the delay in this review.
X-Men Origins - Wolverine - 2-Disc Blu-ray Edition
The Blu-ray finally arrived this past week. It's the first summer blockbuster to come out on Blu-ray this year, so I'm very interested in seeing what they did with the technology and if it is worth buying.
The film tells the origins of Wolverine, which is one of the most popular mutants in Marvel Comics. We learn his connections with several other characters from the X-Men franchise, including Sabretooth. Especially Sabretooth. But there are also a number other seen here, some of which play key roles (Gambit, The Blob, etc), while most others are nothing more than cameos. On the one hand, this does give the comic book nerds in the audience a chance to play, "Spot that Mutant", it doesn't give more casual moviegoers a lot to sink their teeth into. There are a number of impressive action scenes, but the story is weak without much in the way of dramatic tension.
On a side note, Ryan Reynolds short role as Wade Wilson was the best part of the movie. Thank goodness there are making a Deadpool spin-off and I'm happy early reports will make him more like the comic than in this movie. (He will be breaking the fourth wall, for instance.)
The extras on the DVD include two audio commentary tracks, the first with the director and the second with two of the producers. Both are worth checking out, but solo tracks tend to be drier, and that this is the case here. Next up are several featurettes. Starting with the longest, there's Weapon X Mutant Files, which takes a look at a number of the mutants featured in this film (and some of the non-mutants). The Roots of Wolverine is a 16-minute interview featurette with Stan Lee and Len Wein, who talk about how X-men were created and how Wolverine joined the group, etc. Any fans of the comic will love this and will want to watch it several times. Wolverine Unleashed is a 12-minute making of featurette, which is typical of these types of featurettes. Thrill of the Chase is a 6-minute making of featurette about one of the specific action scene. There is a featurette about the World Premiere, and finally four deleted / alternate scenes.
The 2-Disc Blu-ray Edition has all of this, all of which is presented in High Definition. It also has Ultimate X-Mode, which are four Picture-in-Picture tracks. X Connect has information about the movie vis a vis the comic book origins. The Director's Chair talks about the making of the movie. Pre-Visualizing Wolverine has some early special effects for some of the scenes. Finally, X Facts is a pop-up trivia track. The disc is also BD-Live and you can look up facts for the actors. The second disc of the 2-Disc set is the digital copy of the movie.
Technically speaking, the High Definition presentation is a bit of a mixed bag. On the one hand, the video is good, but not great. Well, to be fair, it's very good, but not among the best I've seen, and not a disc I would grab to show off my home theater system. (It would have to be in the top five for that to happen, so that is a very high bar to reach.) Since this was the first summer blockbuster to come out on Blu-ray this year, I was expecting top-of-the-line video quality. On a side note, I've come to a conclusion... Nature looks awesome in High Definition. I'm not sure what it is about a lush forest that shines so much more compared to an urban environment, but it does. Maybe nature just has more details by its very nature. The audio is better than the video, and it is worth showing off to your friends, as the 5.1 track makes excellent use of all speakers to put the viewer at the heart of the action.
X-Men Origins - Wolverine is not a perfect movie with a rather simplistic story, but I think it is better than its Tomatometer score would indicate. Causal fans of the franchise will want to check it out, while hardcore fans of the comics will want to own it. And if you want to own it, the 2-Disc Blu-ray Edition is the one to get. It looks good, sounds amazing, and has plenty of extras, including some High Definition exclusives that push the technology. And to top it all off, it comes at a price that is lower than the equivalent DVD.