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INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS (4K ULTRA HD/BLU-RAY/DIGITAL)

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Everything is an allusion, a pose, in the films of Quentin Tarantino, right down to the font and colors that he uses for his title sequences—even the name of his production company, A Band Apart, which arrogantly asks us to think of him as our generation’s Godard. And how willingly we indulge him says plenty. Tarantino is as much creator as curator, and his overbearing cinephilia appeals to audiences who not only lost it at the movies but can’t seem to live without them: From Reservoir Dogs to his Kill Bill diptych, his films are solipsistic totems to his favorite things, and their effect is often suffocating. near resplendent level of clarity that makes this, quite easily, the best option for home consumption. Add a practically perfect print and no serious healthy boost to image integrity and stability with the UHD offering a far more commanding presence, capable of delivering a level of intimate clarity

superior flesh tones as well. This is a substantial upgrade over the Blu-ray in terms of its color output. Well done! grading. In the first shot of the film -- a distance shot of the old farmhouse and field -- it is readily apparent that not only is the image sharper, it's Inglourious Basterds, a World War II-set revenge fantasy about the secret and sometimes not-so-secret maneuverings of a group of gung-ho Jewish-American Nazi hunters known as the Basterds, is no less meticulously engineered than Tarantino’s other pulp fictions. Except this one is more linear and humane than most, lush with dialogue that rings weighty even at its smuggest, and featuring women that actually sound and feel like real women—not just men (or, more accurately, Tarantino) in drag. The film sees Tarantino moving beyond just flaunting his attention-mongering cine-geekitude, as he actually seems to be scrutinizing his obsession with the cinema by cleverly placing it into an apt historical context. it's not surprising that Tarantino would once again find an imaginative way to use language as a weaponFilms are an experience. And because you might not experience a film the same way twice, I try to do my best to give the less-than-favorites I encounter another shot. Some rise in my esteem, others fall farther. Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds is one of those films that got better with each viewing. Not enough to call it my favorite of his catalog, but enough to say I really enjoy it now and look forward to revisiting it. how much more life there is to a theater marquee in the 38-minute mark, for example), but with that The Nazis have occupied all of France putting the country in a death grip of oppression. “The Jew Hunter” Colonel Hans Landa (Christoph Waltz) scours the countryside searching for Jews in hiding. While in hiding in Paris, one of Landa’s missed targets Shosanna (Mélanie Laurent) runs a cinema that is set to premiere the latest German propaganda war film about a young soldier for Hitler himself. And then, arriving in France ahead of the invasion to liberate Europe of the Nazi scourge are the Basterds. Led by Lieutenant Aldo Raine (Brad Pitt), a band of Jewish soldiers terrorizes Nazi divisions brutally maiming, killing, and scalping their targets. Now the Basterds have a chance to take out the big man himself and that’s an opportunity too juicy to pass up.

The picture quality in the 4K UHD version is simply stunning. The colors are richer, the textures are more detailed, and the cinematography pops off the screen. You can practically feel the tension in the air during the intense scenes, and the humor is even funnier in crystal-clear 4K. This edition also includes a Blu-ray disc and a digital copy, so you can enjoy the film wherever and whenever you want. This is a presentation that looks wholesale better than ever before, but does so in a very nuanced, considered way brightness comes a more foundationally reliable color spectrum, one that is more organic, crisp, and detailed. Primaries delight and even earthen Tarantino's first voyage into rewriting history is a glorious war romp replete with a slew of memorably tense confrontations, perfectly framed shots, bursts of savage violence and funky scoring.Tarantino’s dialogue throughout is more than just witty, as it also exudes feeling, dread, and risk. How and why people speak to each other, or how and why they chose not to, becomes a panic far more chilling than any display of violence in Inglourious Basterds. Tarantino’s words pop, but no longer do they exist entirely to flatter his audience’s pop know-how, but to illuminate the politics of communication and survival during WWII. Image/Sound to the creamier Blu-ray. There is certainly a clear increase in overall brightness with the HDR grading, obvious most anywhere in the film (take a look For this disc, Universal has ported over all of the extras from their original home video release of the film from 2009. That includes a few extended and alternate scenes that mainly highlight the late Sally Menke’s gift for streamlining Tarantino’s dialogue, as well as a full six-minute cut of the Nation’s Pride film-within-the-film shown during the climax. There’s even a parodic making-of documentary of this piece of fake Nazi propaganda, with actors appearing in character as various German filmmakers and officials weigh in on the “project.” A roundtable discussion between critic Elvis Mitchell and Tarantino and Brad Pitt is the most substantial feature here, as the trio delves deep into Tarantino’s methods and the making of Inglourious Basterds. Also of note is the montage of Tarantino’s foul-mouthed clapboard girl and the now poignant featurette in which the cast and crew goofily say hello to Menke. Overall

Selected items are only available for delivery via the Royal Mail 48® service and other items are available for delivery using this service for a charge. For its UHD release of Inglourious Basterds, Universal has ported over most of the supplemental content from the 2009 Blu-ray while adding Deprived of homegrown cinematic entertainment during the war, their acts of violence are ways for them to stage their own movies. Would that they did it more in a style familiar from the cinema of the ’40s (their mode of expression is more Eli Roth than Jacques Tourneur), but this gripe almost becomes moot the second that Eli Roth himself walks on screen holding a bat with which he busts open Nazi heads. One walks into Inglourious Basterds expecting anachronism, but one doesn’t anticipate Tarantino’s frank confession that cinema, like killing Nazis for the Basterds, is a way to live out his male wish-fulfillment fantasies. On one side of the coin, you’re getting this pitch-perfect potboiler thriller, and then on the other, you’re getting this goofy bloody splatter 70s exploitation-style action movie. I just didn’t gel with it. But, as I do with so many movies I don’t often like the first time out, I gave it another shot. And another. And then another. Slowly I was turning into a fan and appreciating the tonal whiplash with each viewing.

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the old SDR colors look flat and drab by comparison. The white sheets seen in a subsequent shot are sparkling, far more luminous and true compared The picture is attractively filmic. It is very sharp and there's no mistaking a healthy grain structure, crisply defined faces

a new segment with Tarantino discussing the film with the New York Times. Below is a list of what's included on the close-ups on weapons, and various environments, whether wooded areas or classy movie theaters. Light or dark, daytime or night, the picture holds To be honest and straight at the outset, I actually really didn’t like Inglourious Basterds the first time I saw it. I just didn’t know what to expect I guess. I loved the opening introduction scene of Hans Landa interrogating a simple local farmer over the location of some missing Jews and the setup for Mélanie Laurent’s Shosanna. Then I loved the introduction of Aldo Raine and The Basterds. But as the film progressed, I just wasn’t feeling how these very different story elements intertwined. and clothes, and an overall sense of screen command that amplifies the movie's wares many times beyond the Blu-ray's abilities. Comparisons reveal Trailers (1080p): Included are Teaser (1:45), Domestic Trailer (2:23), International Trailer (2:08), andNow that Universal Studios is giving Inglourious Basterds a promotion to 4K, it’s a good reason to revisit it! Now, the only thing this set has to offer is a greatly enhanced viewing experience. The 1080p Blu-ray was reference quality in its day, but I found this new 2160p HDR10 and HDR10+ presentation to be simply beautiful - and well worth the upgrade for. However, I can see folks hoping for a more aggressive object-based audio mix and/or a new selection of bonus features being a bit deflated with this release. To that point, I’ll simply argue that the price point to upgrade for image quality only isn’t too severe. And if you've never owned this film, well that just makes the decision a little easier. I’m safely calling this one Highly Recommended. NEW! The New York Times Talks (1080p, 1:08:07): This piece did not appear on the original Blu-ray. It is a lengthy chat with Even though it’s made without irony, you can see how this boast is off-putting to Shosanna, perhaps because the sincerity with which he makes the comparison is the problem: the way his belief that his heroism—revered in a propaganda film produced by Joseph Goebbels (Sylvester Groth) that will premiere in Shosanna’s theater—is no different than York’s doesn’t take into account the concept of goodness. A lushly intriguing grappling with morality, ideology, nepotism, and authorship, the entire chapter may be the deepest Tarantino has ever gotten. Quentin Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds" is a masterpiece of cinema, and the 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray + Digital edition only enhances the experience. This film tells the story of a group of Jewish-American soldiers who are sent on a mission to kill as many Nazis as possible during World War II. The film stars Brad Pitt, Christoph Waltz, Michael Fassbender, and many other talented actors who bring their A-game to every scene. leap off the screen for superior color accuracy. Red Nazi emblems are a color highlight, as is blood, but one would be remiss not to mention

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