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The Road
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October 12, 2021 "Please retry" | DVD | 1 | $8.65 | $7.99 |
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May 17, 2010 "Please retry" | — | 1 | $7.49 | $3.43 |
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Genre | Drama, Thriller |
Format | Multiple Formats, Color, Anamorphic, NTSC, Widescreen, Dolby |
Contributor | Kodi Smit-McPhee, Viggo Mortensen, Robert Duvall, Charlize Theron |
Language | English |
Runtime | 1 hour and 51 minutes |
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Product Description
Product Description
An epic post-apocalyptic tale of the survival of a father and his young son as they journey across a barren America that was destroyed by a mysterious cataclysm.
Amazon.com
In many ways a close adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's grim novel, The Road dutifully plods through the basics of McCarthy's nightmarish post-apocalyptic landscape: a father (Viggo Mortensen) and his young son (Kodi Smit-McPhee) try to survive as they trek along through the sodden, sunless remnants of some awful disaster. Scrounging for food and huddling together to stay warm, they spend most of their time trying to avoid the cannibalistic marauders who roam the highways. The film strikingly demonstrates that McCarthy's book was almost entirely dependent on his extraordinary language for its literary life; the story, such as it is, is so skeletal and spare it doesn't translate well into movie terms. The Proposition director John Hillcoat brings his grungy physicality to the material, so in the matters of the damp clothes and starved bodies and cheerless forests, the movie rings true. But the longer it trudges on, the more it seems a thoroughly conventional conclusion is at the end of this dystopian tale. The Road has one notable selling point: the performance of Viggo Mortensen. In his character's fierce determination to live--but also the gentle sighs he lets forth when confronted with, say, his first sip of whisky in years--Mortensen is completely in the moment, and all too human in the post-human world. --Robert Horton
Stills from The Road (Click for larger image)
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 2.35:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.4 ounces
- Item model number : 34763
- Media Format : Multiple Formats, Color, Anamorphic, NTSC, Widescreen, Dolby
- Run time : 1 hour and 51 minutes
- Release date : May 25, 2010
- Actors : Viggo Mortensen, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Charlize Theron, Robert Duvall
- Subtitles: : English
- Studio : Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- ASIN : B001FB5634
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #79,965 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #4,071 in Mystery & Thrillers (Movies & TV)
- #12,802 in Drama DVDs
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this movie to be a faithful adaptation of the novel, with great acting and realistic cinematography. The film receives mixed reactions regarding its emotional content - while some find the ending poignant and hopeful, others describe it as relentlessly bleak. The movie's dark themes and disturbing scenes receive mixed reviews, with some customers appreciating its authenticity while others find it disturbing.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the movie amazing and captivating, with several mentioning they enjoyed both the film and the book version.
"Excellent movie! Item was brand new still wrapped, and the case and disc was in perfect condition. No complaints." Read more
"Great movie" Read more
"...There are several sublimely wonderful passages that appear throughout the book including a coda at the end that may not seem related to the story..." Read more
"...It's compelling cinema, and Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee make a dynamic team...." Read more
Customers praise the movie's story, describing it as a powerful and believable tale that captures the essence of the novel, with one customer noting its incredibly accurate post-apocalyptic style.
"I recommend this film. The film is not the novel which is a beautiful prose poem. But the cinematography, in dvd or blue-ray, dazzles the viewer...." Read more
"...want a film that moves along at a fast pace, has a clear and easy to follow plot, has plenty of action, has heroic, sexy, or funny characters, is..." Read more
"...That’s what makes it so real and accurate. When the end is near,you have no luxuries,things are just ugly...." Read more
"...Not only does Hillcoat vividly recreate the stark, cold, dirty, brutal environment of a post-apocalyptic world, what's even more important is he..." Read more
Customers praise the acting in the movie, noting its realistic portrayal, with one customer highlighting Viggo Mortenson's haunting performance.
"...The acting deserves awards. Near the beginning of the film I think the director shows footage he took at the site of Mount Saint Helens...." Read more
"...easy to follow plot, has plenty of action, has heroic, sexy, or funny characters, is mostly bright and colorful and has a resolution where all ends..." Read more
"...Scattered throughout the film are supporting roles performed admirably--especially acting legend Robert Duvall in a powerful appearance...." Read more
"...The cast is amazing-Viggo Mortenson with his haunting face, Charlize Theron showing her mental state eroding with every flashback, and Kodi Smit-..." Read more
Customers praise the film's realistic cinematography, with one customer noting its brilliant photography and effects.
"...But the cinematography, in dvd or blue-ray, dazzles the viewer. The acting deserves awards...." Read more
"...This creates a vivid, gritty realism...." Read more
"...The photography and effects are brilliant and give you the dusty, ash like feeling from the book that makes you want to blow on your clothes while..." Read more
"...it is a "dark" film, the characters don't act like heroes, the imagery is depressing, the reason for the apocalypse is vague at best, and many other..." Read more
Customers praise the performances in the movie, particularly Vigo Mortensen's portrayal, with one customer noting it was his best work and another highlighting the excellent score.
"...It is the most thought provoking movie I have ever seen. Viggo Mortenson is flawless (actually everyone is in this movie)...." Read more
"...Extremely engaging film! Worth every penny. Viggo Motensen is great, as is Jodi Smit-McPhee (the boy). Loved this film!!!" Read more
"...It manages to succeed beyond what I expected...." Read more
"...Well acted and well played in every aspect." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the movie's emotional content, with some appreciating its poignant and hopeful ending while others find it relentlessly bleak.
"...minutes was the only entertaining part of this movie although it seemed contrived and unnatural...." Read more
"...Yet, with one insect finally flying by our protagonist, the viewer feels hope, if not for humans, then for life on the earth...." Read more
"...So I lay most of the blame on the director. For how badly this movie was portrayed. Because it is so annoying...." Read more
"This is a really bleek film with some harrowing scenes of holocaust survivors reduced to cannibalism to survive...." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the movie's dark content, with some appreciating its apocalyptic themes while others find it bleak.
"...reasons hated this film primarily because it moves slowly, it is a "dark" film, the characters don't act like heroes, the imagery is depressing, the..." Read more
"Dark and emotional movie about a metor strikes the earth and what happens to humanity. Well acted and directed." Read more
"...The film is not a "feel good" experience. It's dark and scary. You will get nervous watching it...." Read more
"...It is a very dark movie, but well written and keeps you glued to the screen. My whole family enjoyed it very much." Read more
Customers find the horror elements of the movie disturbing and gruesome, with one customer mentioning it gave them nightmares for weeks, though some note there are no zombies in the film.
"...little violence, no zombies, no sweet looking babes, virtually no character development in the..." Read more
"...This film is not for everyone, though; moments of disturbing imagery abound, along with gruesome scenes and human cruelty might stand as a barrier..." Read more
"...Everything doesn't go the way you might want it to go. I adore the painful realism and more movie makers should watch carefully and learn something." Read more
"...movie for everyone due to it being so emotional and at time heart wrenching and graphic...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2010I recommend this film. The film is not the novel which is a beautiful prose poem. But the cinematography, in dvd or blue-ray, dazzles the viewer. The acting deserves awards. Near the beginning of the film I think the director shows footage he took at the site of Mount Saint Helens. But for me, the story pulled me in. I saw the movie first and then read the book.
Rent or buy this film. If you think the premise impossible, check a Scientific American article called, "Nuclear Weapons in a New World", about limited or small nuclear exchanges such as between India and Pakistan. Such a confrontation could kick up enough dust to block the sun around much of the world, decreasing the oceanic plankton growth, for ten years.
The film version of The Road is a modern post Armageddon folktale with unlikely but necessary plot limitations, such as a scarcity rather than a total lack of food. Like many of you, I thought about how even canned food would go bad within a few years and most other food, processed or not, would rot before the story gets to where it starts. The implausibility of the story in no way detracts from the story. People have suspended their disbelief while reading or hearing stories for thousands of years. The search for food propels the plot from one scene to the next, allowing the story teller to do what he wants to do and tell his story.
As in science fiction, a cousin genre to this story, this is a story about the present. As the fish, plant life, animals other than humans, die at a very fast pace around this planet Earth, more every day, we all might be characters in this story. Today, humans judge one another very strongly, and quickly, to be bad people, if not dark and evil. We see a predator around every corner. Our families are separated from other families and individuals are separated by ideas and beliefs. There may be seven billion people in the world but friend is lining up against friend, ideas are lining up against ideas. One billion people, more than there were people in the world one hundred and fifty years ago, live close to starvation around the world today, including in the United States of America. Rich or poor, although we need to protect our children, many of us believe we need to protect our children from other people and other ideas.
Without going too deeply into the story for those who want to read or watch it, Cormac McCarthy spell bounds the reader or listener with his character development of a father and his son trying to survive in a world where they need to feel some purpose and meaning by inventing goals, such as traveling south or to the ocean, without knowing whether going south will help their circumstances in any way. In a world where most of the human race and most animals have died because of some vague catastrophe, this father wants, rather than needs, to raise his son. (The book gives more clues about the cause of the planetary wide mass extinction of life on Earth.) Even his mother could not dig deep enough inside herself to want to go on living in a world without enough other people and without a society holding people together. No social system exists any longer to tell anyone what is right or wrong, good or bad, or good and evil. The boy's father finds books to teach his son to read in a world that does not include humans in its future. The father passes his message of civilization onto his son the only way he can. While telling his son about a world with a community of people, the two of them live separate from the few other people alive in the world who are broken down into either the good people or the cannibals. As the plot progresses, this dichotomy of good and cannibal blurs. The boy rarely sees any other people. When he does, they are starving and trying to survive the only way they know how. Sometimes they don't behave so well. If they eat other people, they are called cannibals. The final scene in the story, after the father dies, shows the boy reaching out to others.
There are other scenes earlier where the boy reaches out to an old man and another where he reaches out to the first other boy close to his own age he has ever seen. His father grabs him and stops him from communicating with the old man and tells the boy not to hold his hand. For one evening, the father shares some food and conversation with the old man. But the father believes getting attached to another human being is too great a risk. The next morning he tells the old man to go his own way. The father believes he cannot afford to trust anyone. When the boy, by chance, sees another fearful boy walk by, he chases him only to have his father stop him. The boy wants to bring trust back into the world and associate with other people. Before a child is ten years old, he will play with any other child, until his parent tells him he does not want him playing with a child who has cancer, cerebral palsy, autism, a different color skin, a different religion, a different nationality, a parent with liberal ideas, and the list can go on for pages.
But, the boy does learn a story about people being good to one another, from his father, that he can pass on to others in spite of the fact that every waking traumatic moment is a horror to the father and this is the only world the boy knows. Cannibalistic groups of men and women hunt other humans for food and a violent death is an ever present fact throughout the story. The reader or viewer needs to suspend disbelief once again. Young children growing up with Europe as their playground during World War Two learned a different lesson while they scrapped for food in and out of the towns. But such children still had a world of people out there, not participating directly in the war, holding the infrastructure of society together. McCarthy gives this boy no such world. Yet, with one insect finally flying by our protagonist, the viewer feels hope, if not for humans, then for life on the earth.
And this is where we the reader might notice something. If you saw or read McCarthy's story No Country for Old Men, you might remember something about someone mentioning carrying the fire in the horn. Once again, in this story the characters pass on the fire from one generation to the next. This is what the father does, the son learns to do, and Cormac McCarthy continues to do.
This is a story about the present. This is not a story about the future.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2025Excellent movie! Item was brand new still wrapped, and the case and disc was in perfect condition. No complaints.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2025Great movie
- Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2012As a frequent commenter on several discussions about the book "The Road" I have stayed away from the film discussion but I feel it's time to lay it to rest. Having waded through all of the posted reviews in this discussion it seems to me that the same fact should be stated for the film version as applies to the book. That being that this is a film that has no middle ground in terms of approval or disapproval. It isn't for idle entertainment. It requires active thinking on the part of the viewer. Some of the reviews posted here simply don't get it and do a disservice but there are many that for well stated reasons hated this film primarily because it moves slowly, it is a "dark" film, the characters don't act like heroes, the imagery is depressing, the reason for the apocalypse is vague at best, and many other reasons but I think I've hit the main ones. So if you want a film that moves along at a fast pace, has a clear and easy to follow plot, has plenty of action, has heroic, sexy, or funny characters, is mostly bright and colorful and has a resolution where all ends well, "The Road" isn't your film.
There are several very good reviews before this one that go into details I won't repeat again except that it's my opinion that the book's author, Cormac McCarthy, gave the film his approval for reasons other than the film being true to the book. I was surprised when I saw the film because the film changes several key scenes, alters the time line, and omits several of the most important scenes in the book. I don't want to spoil these changes by writing about them, but if you did enjoy the film you should read the book if you haven't already done so. It's a relatively short book, with no chapters. So have a bookmark on hand. It's written in a style that some have called "stream of consciousness" which isn't exactly accurate. It is written primarily in the third person but there are moments when this shifts into first person from The Man's point of view. There are several sublimely wonderful passages that appear throughout the book including a coda at the end that may not seem related to the story at first, and has created a storm of opinions since the book's publication. The book, like the film, may seem to move slowly, particularly the first third of the book, but it sets the scene and drives home the desperation and loneliness of the world in ruin. I can see why McCarthy approved the film as a passable attempt to convey his transcendent Southern gothic horror into a big screen entertainment product. Clearly it's wasn't going to be as popular as "No Country for Old Men" but even that film was controversial due mainly to the ending.
As I read "The Road" it seemed to be written in a cinematic style, as if he wrote it for a film, even though I don't think that his intention. But several of his previous novels were successfully transformed into films and perhaps when he wrote "The Road" it was in his mind. So for a quick film review: the acting is excellent, the cinematography is realistic for the most part, although there are some scenes that I noticed trees with leaves in the background, the music score is excellent, the continuity is fair to good (although there are huge leaps in the time line), and the direction seems very good. I have to give it less than five stars because I know too much about the story and the film tends to try to condense parts of the ending and leaves out several important scenes. There are a few scenes in the film that aren't in the book, but that's to be expected with most book to film adaptations. These are additions and subtractions made by the production team that may have as much to do with their budget, schedules, and locations as with any artistic purpose or even the conceits of the stars or directors. As I've previously stated, I was disappointed that they left out several key scenes, at least two may have been considered too shocking and some alterations in the plot were unfortunate. The blu-ray does show several out takes that were left out of the film but only one is a scene in the book that was cut and the other is an extension of the ending which the director unfortunately cut, perhaps due to time constraints. Overall it's a good adaptation but not excellent. Please, if you enjoyed the film at all and can do so, read the book. Your library is open.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2024I’ve seen this many times since its release and still believe it’s an incredibly accurate “fallout” or “apocalyptic” style movie. Not to spoil it for some but it’s a depressing movie. That’s what makes it so real and accurate. When the end is near,you have no luxuries,things are just ugly. Still well worth the watch to give you a sense of how great our lives really are.
Top reviews from other countries
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ménart stéphaneReviewed in Belgium on October 30, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars la route the road dvd blu ray parfait
Merci beaucoup a tout l équipe Amazon est bpost
- Darth MaciekReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 6, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars "Do you ever wish you would die?" "No. It's foolish to ask for luxuries in times like these."
This is definitely the BEST, the most extreme and the most shocking of all post-apocalyptics films I ever saw in my life. I am afraid I will never be able to forget it, even and especially the scenes which I would actually be glad to forget... But still, I am very glad I watched it. Below, more of my impressions, with some very limited SPOILERS.
A man (Viggo Mortensen) and his 12 year old son (Kodi Smit-McPhee) struggle to survive after an unspecified cataclysm has apparently killed most plant and animal life. Countless millions of people starved, civilization has collapsed and survivors are reduced to scavenging and even cannibalism. The father and son are travelling to the south, following a road which leaves to the coast where - they hope - some plants and animals survived. The man carries a revolver but they have only two bullets.
This is a slow paced film, with very few characters (Robert Duvall, Charlize Theron and Michael Kenneth Williams appear, but only in cameos) and for most of it we can see only the father and son. For the greatest part of the film there is little action and also very little color - it is a very bleak, cold, misty, gray and mostly dead world... And yet, this film kept me hooked from the beginning to the end and I couldn't stop watching it. Viggo Mortensen proves here once again that he is an INCREDIBLE actor, one of the best in the business in our times - and young Kodi Smit-McPhee supports him valiantly.
This film is very good but so shocking and intense that even if I bought the book, I still didn't dare to read it - because it seems it is even TOUGHER than the movie...
I decided to deliberately keep this review short to avoid any temptation to give more spoilers, because you really deserve to discover "The Road" in all its splendor and terror by yourself. So I will just say here once more - this is an INCREDIBLY powerful, shocking and very, very sad masterpiece. It deserves to be discovered, but DO NOT watch it if you feel depressed or even a little bit down - because it will not do you any good. One needs to brace himself a little before watching "The Road"...
Bottom line, this film is a must, for all amateurs of good cinema. You will not enjoy it - but you may just hate it enough to love it...
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WillinsideReviewed in Italy on February 6, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars ANALISI DI UN GRAN BEL TITOLO SENZA SPOILER
Visto prima su prime video e poi acquistato. È un film classificato azione-fantascienza-drammatico che di azione non ha quasi nulla, di fantascienza quasi nulla in realtà, risultando quasi del tutto drammatico.
Tratto dal famoso libro, il racconto si districare e prende le mosse iniziali da situazioni trite e ritrite che mettono il pubblico di fronte al terrore di vedere la solita cosa su zombie, apocalisse, fine dell umanità, ecc... Che per quanto possano piacere come genere ormai ne hanno un po abusato.
SENZA SPOILER posso dire che, nonostante. Le premesse, si tratta di un bellissimo film che oserei definire sentimentale drammatico che analizza il sentimento di un padre per un figlio (e alla fine viceversa) in un epoca che non lascia spazio ai sentimenti,dove il mondo è in rovina e l umanità sta sparendo.
SE NON RICORDO MALE, AL FESTIVAL FILOSOFICO di qualche anni fa, il sociologo Recalcati citó questo film a sottolineare non solo il rapporto padre/figlio, ma anche quello che definì in un libro il complesso di Telemaco. Opera anch'essa molto interessante per ampliare il proprio orizzonte.
Tornando al film, consiglio la versione blue ray che eleva un po la qualità video che su prime video è pessima (360p, sono sicuro).
Un titolo da avere e rivedere a distanza di tempo che ci ricorda quanto, questa nostra epoca che banalizza i sentimenti o li straccia in scorci televisivi in cui i panni sporchi non si lavano più in famiglia, a volte sia importante ricordarci che tutti noi abbiamo un cuore o, se non consapevoli, prima o poi ne dovremo usare uno.
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Freddy Castillo O.Reviewed in Mexico on July 4, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente calidad
El producto es de muy buena calidad y, además, lo cual es lo más importante, la película es preciosa
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Combat WombatReviewed in Germany on March 19, 2011
5.0 out of 5 stars Intensiv, düster, authentisch
ZUM FILM:
Die gesellschaftliche Ordnung ist zusammengebrochen, Sicherheiten existieren keine mehr, jeder ist vor allem sich selbst der Nächste - und die Wahrscheinlichkeit, dass ein neuer Tag auch der letzte im Leben ist, ist sehr hoch! Wenn das Leben von Menschen auf die genannten Aspekte reduziert werden kann, dann wissen wir als Zuschauer sofort: Es herrscht Endzeit-Stimmung!
Zahlreiche Endzeit-Filme sind in den letzen Jahren erschienen. Jedoch kann ich mich an keinen entsprechenden Film erinnern, der ähnlich düster und deprimierend war wie "The Road". Dies noch umso mehr, da der Film zwar in einer für den Zuschauer fremden, post-apokalyptischen Welt spielt, diese jedoch sehr realistisch beschrieben wird. Und so entwickelt sich für den Zuschauer ein sehr intensives und extrem unter die Haut gehendes Filmerlebnis; und das, obwohl er beinahe komplett ohne Actionszenen auskommt. Freunde von handfester Action sind in diesem Film definitiv falsch!
"The Road" thematisiert nicht die Ursache der Apokalypse selbst. Der Zuschauer erfährt nur ansatzweise, wie der Untergang der Zivilisation, wie wir sie kennen, verlaufen ist. Im Mittelpunkt steht vielmehr der tägliche Kampf eines Vaters und seinem Sohn - um das tägliche Überleben auf ihrer Reise durch eine Welt, in der die Werte Moral und menschliche Nächstenliebe keine Bedeutung mehr haben. Das Ziel der Reise ist dabei nicht wirklich klar. Die beiden tragen letztlich nur die Hoffnung auf eine südlichere und womöglich lebensfreundlichere Umgebung in sich.
Dabei ist es bewundernswert, mit welch großer Mühe der Vater (Viggo Motensen) versucht, sich und seinem Sohn (Kodi Smit-MePhee) den letzten Funken von Moral und Anstand zu bewahren. Nicht leicht in einer Welt, in der die Fauna stirbt und die Menschen oft zu Kannibalen werden, um das eigene Überleben zu sichern. Eine öde, eine sehr traurige Welt ist dies, in der die Vögel niemals zwitschern und die Sonne niemals scheint. Und es gibt Momente, in denen der Sohn erfahrener wirkt als der Vater, der bis zum Schluss nicht so recht in diese kaputte Welt passen mag. Der Sohn hingegen wurde in diese Welt hineingeboren und ist ein Kind dieser Zeit, das eine heile Welt nur aus den Erzählungen seines Vaters kennt.
Im krassen Gegensatz zu den hoffnungslosen Endzeit-Bildern stehen die wenigen farbenfrohen, ja geradezu warmen Szenen aus besseren Tagen, die in Rückblenden die verblassenden Erinnerungen des Vaters an schönere Zeiten zeigen.
Ich habe mich beinahe permanent dabei ertappt, wie ich mich bei der Sichtung des Films gefragt habe, wie ich mich wohl in dieser oder jener Situation verhalten würde: Würde ich zu den Guten oder zu den Bösen gehören? Würde ich töten, um zu überleben? Würde ich mit anderen Menschen mein weniges Essen, das ich habe, teilen oder ihnen diese Hilfe verwehren? Würde ich Menschen ihre letzte Kleidung stehlen und sie dem sicheren Tod überlassen? Oder zusammengefasst: Wie würde ich mich wohl in dieser, komplett aus den Fugen geratenen, Welt verhalten?
"The Road" tut weh und verlangt vom interessierten Zuschauer, der sich auf die Reise mit den beiden Hauptcharaktern einlassen möchte, einiges an Energie ab. Ich persönlich bin sehr begeistert von diesem kleinen und stillen und gleichzeitig so intensiven Film, in dem der Großteil der Menschheit auf seine Instinkte reduziert wird.
ZUR BLU-RAY:
Das Bild zu bewerten ist extrem schwierig, da die Farben extrem reduziert wurden, um die Wirkung der Endzeit-Bilder noch zu verstärken. Teilweise hat man das Gefühl, quasi farblose Bilder zu betrachten, die nur noch schwarz-weiß oder sepiafarben sind. Abgesehen davon ist das Bild jedoch stets scharf und kontrastreich.
Die Tonqualität ist beinahe vernachlässigbar, da der Film zumeist durch Dialoge und den sehr guten Soundtrack getragen wird. In den wenigen actionreichen kommt jedoch sogar der Subwoofer zum Einsatz und es rummst ordentlich.
Bei den Extras ist vor allem der interessante Regiekommentar positiv zu erwähnen.
FAZIT:
Ein grandioses Stück Film auf einer guten Blu-Ray!