DVD
REVIEW: ELYSIUM
12/16/2013
OVERVIEW: From Academy Award® nominated writer/director Neill Blomkamp (2010, Best Adapted Screenplay, District 9) comes the visionary sci-fi action thriller ELYSIUM, available on Blu-ray™ combo pack, DVD and digital HD UltraViolet on Dec. 17 from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. The Blu-ray combo pack comes with hours of bonus materials, including an extended scene, and six behind-the-scenes featurettes that give an in-depth look at the making of the film, including the performances, production design, visual effects and the technology of ELYSIUM.
SYNOPSIS: In the year 2154, two classes of people exist: the very wealthy, who live on a pristine man-made space station called Elysium, and the rest who live in an overpopulated, ruined Earth. Secretary Delacourt (Foster) will stop at nothing to preserve the luxurious lifestyle of the citizens of Elysium – but that doesn’t stop the people of Earth from trying to get in by any means they can. Max (Damon) agrees to take on a life threatening mission, one that could bring equality these polarized worlds.
FILM REVIEW: The name Elysium is rather fitting for this Sci-fi flick and according to
www.wikipedia.org, Elysian Fields was the name given to the afterlife or heaven by some Ancient Greek religious sects and cults. This articulates quite a bit about the basis in which we see this movie. It is futuristic and gritty, somewhat sad, but hopeful flick and at the same time very interesting in terms of the cinematography and graphical expressions. The whole movie is essentially a morphed version of Writer/Director Neill Blomkamp’s District 9 (2009) and Tom Cruise’s latest release, Oblivion. This is completed with an outlandish story, predictable archetypes, and enough exposition to string together a series of fights between our hero, in this case, and the‘soul-less’ robots in heavily populated residential areas that bear a striking resemblance to Brazil’s Favelas (or in this case, more like a futuristic version of Mexico City). Personally I’ve never been anti-”District 9,” and I always thought that it was awesome that a major motion picture was born outside of the Hollywood institution… in this case, the South African Film Industry.
Matt Damon, in my humble opinion does a mediocre job with his character as the main protagonist which may or may not be a welcomed change of pace for him. That being said, Damon is very versatile and he particularly excels at playing the ‘every-man’ characters put into difficult situations. Unfortunately I don’t think he was the right choice for the character here and despite his well-known and acclaimed talent; he just didn’t do justice to the role. Nevertheless, his short comings did have some redemption because Elysium also has a nice supporting cast including the magnificent Jodie Foster (one can never go wrong with seeing a Jodie Foster movie), Diego Luna (Contraband, 2012) and William Fichtner (The Lone Ranger, 2013) who seems to turn up in a lot of movies as a rent-a-villain these days. Lol Sharlto Copley, on-the-other-hand, is a South African producer, actor, and director whom has produced and co-directed short films which have appeared at the Cannes Film Festival, according to
Wikipedia; However, he certainly took away from this film as an actor and especially as the superior villain. His vocals throughout the entire film were incomprehensible, at best, and I struggled the entire time to understand anything he had to say, including the usual “villain-oneliners.” His vocals were actually worst than the super-villain “Bane,” in the latest Batman flick (which I didn’t think was possible for an English speaking movie).
Overall, I did enjoy this latest Matt Damon movie, despite the few short-comings. It encapsulated good sci-fi-style action, with lots of cool futuristic technology on display and a constant plot development that kept things from getting completely boring. I think Jodi Foster carried the entire movie with her character and made for an extremely interesting fem-fatal villain. Elysium, certainly deserve four out of five stars for action and adventure.
Review
By Movi-Man Stan
DVD:
The film is
presented in widescreen in a 2.40:1 aspect ration preserving its
theatrical format. The picture is just flawless. Not only the
picture looks great in this release, also the sound it is good,
a 5.1 Dolby Digital in English that provides a good complement
to the picture. It also includes English,
Chinese, French, Korean, Malay, Portuguese, Thai,
and Spanish subtitles.
VIDEO:
Widescreen (2.40:1) 16x9
AUDIO:
English Spanish French
Thai Portuguese 5.1 Dolby Digital
Subtitles - English Spanish
French
SPECIAL
FEATURES:
Collaboration: Crafting the Performances in Elysium- Meet the dynamic cast and get insight into how they prepared for their roles.
Engineering Utopia: Creating a Society in the Sky - A look at designing and creating the utopian space station.
Ultraviolet