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The Colony

Blu Ray

  • Score
    60
    from 2 reviewers
    Review Date:
  • 'The Colony': forgettable, lacks rewatch value, can be a low-expectation rental.

    The Colony Blu-ray Front Cover

    Disc Release Date:

    DTS-HD MA
  • Video
    75
  • The Colony's 1080p Blu-ray impresses with crisp detail and minimal noise, showcasing vibrant colors and deep blacks despite occasional banding issues. Shot with Arri Alexa and skillfully using digital effects and green screen.

  • Audio
    72
  • The film's DTS-HD MA 5.1 audio impressively captures the harsh, immersive world and its battles, with clear dialogue, diverse soundscapes, and Jeff Danna's energetic score.

  • Extra
    45
  • Behind-the-scenes interviews (1080p; 9:50) feature director Renfroe and cast discussing roles, with standard insights. No film trailer, but other movie trailers play at startup.

  • Movie
    52
  • The Colony, starring Fishburne and Paxton, fails to innovate in dystopian sci-fi, rehashing tired tropes despite a promising start and visual uniqueness.

    Video: 75

    The Blu-ray presentation of "The Colony," captured by cinematographer Pierre Gill using the Arri Alexa camera and later completed with a digital intermediate, manages to translate the chilling atmosphere of the now-frozen earth onto the screen with exceptional clarity and precision. Thanks to the camera's capabilities, the 1080p, AVC-encoded Blu-ray showcases detailed imagery free from digital noise, maintaining its crisp qualities without succumbing to digital harshness. The steely blue palette dominates, symbolizing the desolate cold, yet is broken by occasional bursts of warmer tones in scenes that highlight humanity's perseverance. Despite being encoded at an average bitrate of 21.00 Mbps, a figure which might raise concerns under different circumstances, the digital origin of the footage allows this to be sufficient, ensuring that no obvious compression artifacts mar the visual experience. However, an increase in the bitrate could potentially enhance the overall quality, especially considering there was unused capacity on the BD-25 disc.

    Viewers are treated to a visual landscape where exterior shots present a world ensnared by white, gray, and black hues, reflecting the bleakness of the environment. Although much of this desolation is captured against green screens or similar special effects backgrounds, rendering post-production color insertions minimal, there are moments where vibrant blues and subtle colors manage to pierce through the monochrome, particularly noticeable in character wardrobes or during fleeting glimpses of colorful skies. The interior scenes shine in terms of detail reproduction, offering clear depictions of facial features and textures within the bleak settings of factories and old concrete buildings.

    However, not all aspects of the video presentation are flawless. The encoding occasionally struggles with banding issues, particularly in scenes filled with deep blacks or where the expansive blue and gray skies dominate the screen. This problem detracts from an otherwise excellent presentation, highlighting a need for technical improvements in managing such disparities. Despite these obstacles, the Blu-ray succeeds in communicating the environmental and thematic essence of "The Colony," capturing both its visual austerity and its moments of warmth and color amidst a frozen dystopia.

    Audio: 72

    The Colony" presents its chilling, dystopian tale through an audio experience meticulously crafted to draw listeners into its frostbitten world, utilizing a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track that captures the essence of its setting and characters with remarkable clarity. The soundscape is rich with the howls of relentless winds and the unique acoustic signatures of various environments, from the expansive echoes within Colony 7's cavernous confines to the industrial clamor that characterizes Colony 5. Such attention to detail ensures a palpable sense of place, further enriched by the well-executed effects that accompany action sequences—gunshots sound appropriately gritty, and the war cries of attackers add a visceral layer to the experience, all without overwhelming the subtler sounds that dot the film's tense atmosphere.

    The technical prowess extends to the handling of dialogue and music, ensuring that each word spoken by the cast is clear and resolute against the backdrop of Jeff Danna's energetic score. The music complements the ambiance perfectly, enhancing both the desolation and fleeting moments of hope encountered by the characters. Meanwhile, sound effects are strategically dispersed across channels, creating a dynamic auditory field that makes excellent use of the LFE channel during explosive scenes to deliver an added punch, without sacrificing the overall balance of the mix.

    What stands out in this audio presentation is not just the accuracy of environmental sounds or the clarity of dialogue, but how these elements are woven together to create a coherent and immersive experience. Despite being described as fairly standard, it's evident that considerable effort was put into achieving a mix that conveys the harshness of the film’s setting while maintaining enough versatility to support quieter, more introspective moments. This balanced approach ensures that the viewer is not just watching the movie but is transported into its very soul, feeling every chill and hearing every whisper as if standing alongside its characters.

    Extra: 45

    The Blu-ray extras for "The Colony" offer an insightful peek into the making of the film, primarily through behind-the-scenes interviews with both the cast and crew. In a concise yet substantial 9-minute featurette presented in 1080p high definition, viewers are given a well-rounded understanding of the creative process behind the movie. Director Jeff Renfroe, along with cinematographer Gill, take this opportunity to delve into their artistic and technical approaches—highlighting Renfroe's decision to pivot the narrative around Sam as the central hero and Gill's visual strategies. The actors, including Laurence Fishburne, Bill Paxton, Kevin Zegers, and Charlotte Sullivan, share their experiences and explorations of their respective characters. Notably, the disc does not include the film's original trailer but automatically plays trailers for unrelated movies at startup, though these can be skipped.

    Extras included in this disc:

    • Behind the Scenes Interviews with Cast and Crew: An engaging featurette that explores the film's production from the perspectives of director Jeff Renfroe, cinematographer Gill, and key cast members.

    Movie: 52

    The Colony" lands on Blu-ray amid a flurry of mixed reactions, emblematic of a film whose ambitious narrative scaffold succumbs to the gravity of genre clichés. The movie, harboring the talents of Laurence Fishburne and Bill Paxton and flourishing under the cinematographic expertise of Pierre Gill, teeters on the brink of revitalizing the dystopian sci-fi thriller genre. Set against a 2045 backdrop of an icy, post-apocalyptic Earth—a consequence of humanity's ill-fated dabbling in weather control—'The Colony' roots its premise in the survivalist ordeal of Colony 7. Led by Briggs (Fishburne), a character sculpted by his past horrors, and his foil Mason (Paxton), the narrative initially promises a foray into the bleak yet compelling survival strategies amidst the remnants of civilization.

    However, as it unfolds, 'The Colony' echoes a familiar cinematic refrain, pilfering elements from a lineage of apocalyptic and zombie narratives. Despite leveraging the unique setting of a decommissioned NORAD base in Ontario for Colony 7's depiction—lending an air of authenticity and visual allure—the film abruptly veers into the well-trodden path of roving bands of feral humans à la multiple predecessors. This pivot not only detracts from the exploration of its own speculative universe but also dampens the potential intricacy of its characters and their interrelations, relegating them to archetypes navigating a predictably perilous scenario.

    Notwithstanding its craftsmanship and the fleeting glimpses of an original narrative thread, 'The Colony' is ensnared by the tropes it so diligently assembles. The juxtaposition of its promising setup with the ensuing derivative plotline encapsulates a cinematic endeavor that, while visually captivating, ultimately resigns itself to the shadows of its forebears. The film inadvertently foregrounds the challenge of innovation within saturated genres, serving as a reflective piece on the pitfalls of reliance on established conventions over novel exploration.

    Total: 60

    The Colony" stands as an example of a film with a promising concept that unfortunately unfolds into a myriad of missed opportunities. Throughout its duration, the movie attempts to captivate its audience with excessive stylistic choices, such as unnecessary slow-motion scenes that do more to detract from the narrative than enhance it. This overreliance on visual flairs suggests a lack of confidence in its storytelling, leading to a descent into a formulaic chase sequence populated with archetypical antagonists. Despite its pitfalls, the Blu-ray presentation of the film is commendable, boasting decent image quality and robust sound, hinting at what could have been a more memorable experience had the content matched the container's capability.

    Even though "The Colony" is adorned with a solid Blu-ray treatment, this does little to elevate the film beyond being an ephemeral diversion. It becomes clear that the essence of what might have been an engaging science fiction tale about survival is overshadowed by its execution, rendering it forgettable and not warranting multiple viewings. The film, with its lackluster rewatch value and narrative shortcomings, positions itself as a mere casual watch that barely justifies a rental, provided the viewers keep their expectations in check.

    In conclusion, while "The Colony" might serve as an acceptable way to while away a few hours, it falls short of leaving a lasting impression or fulfilling the potential its premise suggests. The Blu-ray presentation stands as the sole highlight, offering respectable audiovisual quality. However, given the film's failure to effectively hold the audience's attention or deliver a compelling story, it is best approached with minimal expectations. Ultimately, it merits consideration for a one-time rental but lacks the substance and originality needed to secure a place in the discerning viewer's collection.