Wednesday, January 25, 2017

MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN 4K Blu-ray Review

MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN (4K UHD Blu-ray + Blu-ray + Digital HD)
Release Date: December 13, 2016
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Video: 1.85:1 2160p Widescreen
Audio: English Dolby Atmos (TrueHD 7.1 Core), Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1, French Dolby Digital 5.1, Portuguese Dolby Digital 5.1, Russian DTS 5.1, Ukranian Dolby Digital 5.1


THE RATINGS

The Movie Itself - ★ ★ ★  
Video Quality - ★ ★ ★ ★½
Audio Quality - ★ ★ ★ ★ 
Special Features - ★ ★ ★ ✰ 
Overall - ★ ★ ★ ★ 

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THE FILM ITSELF Our Reviewer's Take
4K is this release's Peculiarity.
Reviewed by Gavin King

When it comes to young-adult book-to-screen adaptations - particularly of the action/romance hybrid - critical and commercial reception is often projected as frowned upon, and in some cases for good reason (take a look at Allegiant, for goodness sake). Not only do some films predictably stray away from the true roots of the book-bound regions, but some happen to stick a bit too much, yearning the need for a sign on the movie theater auditorium door reading the following in big bold type: “For hardcore fans only.” Earlier this year, we got swayed with the unremarkable The 5th Wave, which had its very mild moments - particularly near the film’s beginning, unsurprisingly - but was overall doomed by poor plot execution and its relatively slow pace. As we go a bit further into September of 2016, the book-to-screen adaptation of Ransom Riggs’ hit novel Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, directed by the one, the only, Tim Burton, and starring the likes of Asa Butterfield, Eva Green, Ella Purnell, Judi Dench, and Samuel L. Jackson, comes into play. What a breath of fresh air in the YA genre. Instead of reverting to unnecessary dullness and monotonous execution, what we get is a fun, entertaining, and well-paced ride that may not be up to Burton’s true best, but is far from his worst collaborations (ahem… Alice Through the Looking Glass.) and shows true potential for a franchise.

Jake (Asa Butterfield) has lived his whole life being told stories by his grandfather Abe Portman (Terence Stamp) about him spending his life at “Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children” and battling evil monster who dare take over their territory. But one day, when Jake gets home from his often-ridiculed job of a grocery store clerk, something mysterious happens at his house. He realizes his grandfather has been attacked by the dreaded monsters who attack the Peculiars. A dying Grandpa Abe tells him that he must go to Miss Peregrine’s Home For Peculiar Children, located in Cairnholm, to help save the so-called Peculiars from these monsters before it’s too late. Jake and his father (Chris O’Dowd) then head off to Cairnholm and stay a while at a bar in the small, foggy town. Jake then sneaks off through the woods and spots Miss Peregrine’s home, but realizes it was destroyed during a German invasion in September of 1943. Luckily, he’s greeted by a few Peculiars, and they’re sent along with him through a time loop back in 1943 when their home was still intact. Jake then meets Miss Peregrine herself (Eva Green) who introduces him to the Peculiars and tells him about the time loop he was sent back on and how it benefits her and the Peculiar children. The time loop is set to September 3, 1943, the day before their home was bombed by the Germans, and Miss Peregrine switches the time loop back 24 hours so the Peculiars can live the same day over and over again, without aging. But now they face a new threat. The Hollows (led by Samuel L. Jackson’s character) are hungry for peculiars after a failed experiment in which they were Peculiars but now are revenge-seeking monsters who crave the eyes of Peculiars. Now in more danger than they ever thought they would be, Miss Peregrine and the Peculiars must defend themselves to take down these vengeful beasts once and for all - and have Jake discover that he’s Peculiar, too.

Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children mixes an interesting concept with satisfyingly ooky creepiness. It’s not up there with the classics of Tim Burton (The Nightmare Before Christmas, Beetlejuice), but there’s no denying the film has his eye for the occasional creepy factor, fun action sequences, and memorable characters. The whole idea of the Peculiars is an intriguing concept altogether. It’s nice enough to see Ransom Riggs’ beloved novel translated to the screen in passionate finesse, but to make it a concept that moviegoers flee for is truly special. When’s the last time you’ve seen a movie in which special people, different from the rest of the ordinary world, are kept in a unique establishment so they can all fit in whilst showcasing their, well, peculiar talents? It’s a good thing the wonderful concept is interweaved with great execution. 

And that great execution is largely thanks to the film's unique visual style. It's a shame few other films - destined of this kind of genre and not - get this much advanced and inspired digital construction behind them, on and behind the camera via special effects. Many of the interesting specail effects come to play via the Peculiars. There's a really fun scene about 20 minutes into the movie where there's a bar mishap that takes place with the Peculiars trying to save Jake from being "taken care of" by older townsfolk. A couple of the Peculiar children come to save him, and one particular Peculiar by the name of Emma Bloom literally starts a fire with her bare hands to burn down the old pub. The digital effects artists have done a remarkable job at bringing Riggs' wonderful world of Peculiarity to astonishing life, and no praise can be given enough to the accomplishment they have done to sastisfy general moviegoers as well as lovers of the original book.

The cast is up for the challenge, too. Asa Buttefield, Ella Purnell, and Eva Green are just some of the many great acting talents that protrude happily and strongly through the movie, but Samuel L. Jackson as Barron the Hollow is arguably the film's big standout. That's not too much of a huge surprise, considering Sam Jackson's resume in movies like The Avengers and Snakes on a Plane, but there's no denying he has a wonderful enthusiasm and gleefully entertaining villainry to bringing the eye-craving, ultra-menacing Barron to the screen with oompah power and delivery. The movie could use a little bit of work in a few very mild areas. Pacing seems to be a bit sluggish towards the entry of the film's final act and the film could do without at most  20 minutes, but overall this is a fun, enjoyable, inventive, and surprisingly thought-provoking entry into Tim Burton's endless canon of creepiness.


MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN 4K Blu-ray - Video Quality


Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children was actually finished on a 4K digital intermediate, making this one of the rare cases in which a 4K UHD Blu-ray isn't upscaled from a 2K digital intermediate. And the upgrade looks fantastic. While it's not particularly up there with the cream of the crop of the best 4K UHD releases out there, such as Storks - it's nonetheless a worthy upgrade and one that offers subtle yet obvious improvements over the already terrifc 1080p Blu-ray transfer. Details are a bit more refined on faces, grassy areas, the odds and ends in Miss Peregrine's home, and clothing fabrics, as is general depth of field particularly in a scene where Miss Peregrine hunts a Hollow (I believe) with an arrow. Colors are more nuanced, too. Take note in the scene where Jake and his father are in Carinholm. They're a smidge darker yet a bit more realized than on the 1080p Blu-ray, just one of the fine examples of expert color grading on this UHD Blu-ray. There's slightly darker contrast in less lit sequences, such as the battles between the Peculiars and the Hollows, and the black levels in those scenes never falter when it comes to pinpoint accuracy and lifelike satisfaction. Obviously, there are no compression anomalies to report here, since this is coming from a 4K DI. Miss Peregrine's 4K UHD Blu-ray presentations offers up everything an eager videophile would want from a film of this caliber with spot on, though not overtly groundbreaking, improvements that make this worth buying for those interested in purchasing the film and fans alike.



MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN 4K Blu-ray - Audio Quality

Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children's DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1 was strong-sounding on the Blu-ray, and with an upgraded Dolby Atmos track here on the UHD, it lightly yet appreciably adds to the film's atmosphere very well. First off, the net 7.1 effects are similar here: what many audiophiles will race to this track for is obviously the film's big set pieces. There's lots of fun to be had in the ways of surround activity and nicely-done LFE that fully saturate the stage in blasting arrows, musical score, fun foley effects, and much, much more. Music, whether the aformentioned score or an electronica-like piece that plays at the 100 minute mark, offers plenty of front-end support and ample surround spacing that sets the viewer into the stage comfortably and immersively. The overheads come to play in a number of moments, particularly in more commendatory roles such as better atmosphere immersion but bringing some big battle sound effects to bigger and better life. General dialogue is consistently anchored into the front channel, with natural positioning and lifelike precision and never wanting for extra clarity or clearness. This is a hugely strong, subtly yet admiringly improved track that takes all that's great about the original Blu-ray's DTS-HD MA track and adds a few nice little touches to make it a little bit better and more fun along the way.


MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN 4K Blu-ray - Special Features


Note that all supplements are located on the original 1080p Blu-ray disc, included with this package.

- The Peculiar Story looks a bit at Ransom Riggs' original book, the story of/behind it, and how it translated to the big screen, with interviews with Riggs and company.

- The Peculiars consists of several parts, and each featurette looks at each Peculiar and their themes and personalities that make them a Peculiar. These include the following: Abe, Miss Peregrine, Jake, Emma, Bronwyn, Claire, Olive, Enoch, Fiona, Horace, Hugh, Millard, The Twins, Miss Avocet, and Victor. (That's a lot, but hey, y' can't leave 'em out, right?)

- Hollows & Ex-Hollows focuses on the film's main menacing villains, led by Samuel L. Jackson's character, Barron.

- Map of Days looks at the time loop aspect of the movie in two segments: Miss Peregrine's Home and Blackpool Tower.

- "Wish That You Were Here" Florence + The Machine Music Video

- Gallery includes Photographs and Sketches by Tim Burton.

- Theatrical Trailers Theatrical Trailer A and Theatrical Trailer B.


MISS PEREGRINE'S HOME FOR PECULIAR CHILDREN 4K Blu-ray - Overall Recommendation

Miss Peregrine's Home For Peculiar Children shows that Tim Burton hasn't lost his eye (no pun intended, if you can catch it) for this type of filmmaking. It may not go down in history as a Burton classic unlike film such as Beetlejuice, but the film's visual style, excellent performances, and fun, consistently entertaining action make it well worth a recommendation. Add that to a third act that's a total blast and up there with Burton's best action sequences and a script that's faithful to the original source material, and you've got a film that's popcorn-munching, edge-of-your-seat fun for those seeking a break from tired, cliched action money-rakers. Fox's 4K Blu-ray is largely excellent. With the added benefit of a 4K digital intermediate, there's a subtle but noticable upgrade over the original 1080p Blu-ray's video transfer. What's also lightly but nicely improved is the audio track; the switch from 7.1 to overhead/height-enabled Atmos is welcomed. Supplements stay quite interesting in content. Highly recommended for home theater enthusiasts.



EXTRA SCREENSHOTS (Right-click and select 'Open image in new tab' to see full size)

    
    
    
    
    
    
    

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