9 appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. The image looked very good.
No complaints related to sharpness. Across the board, the flick showed nice clarity and delineation.
No issues with jagged edges or moiré effects appeared, and edge enhancement remained absent. The movie also failed to display any source defects, as it remained clean at all times.
Colors worked well, as 9 went with a subdued palette that usually favored a brownish tone. Within the visual choices, the hues looked good, and challenging colors like intense reds appeared tight and well-rendered.
Blacks were dark and rich, while shadows demonstrated nice smoothness and clarity. This was a pleasing presentation.
In addition, the DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack of 9 really satisfied, as the soundfield appeared broad and engaging throughout the movie. All five speakers got a strong workout as they displayed a lot of discrete audio.
This made for a convincing environment as we heard plenty of atmosphere, and objects swirled actively and appropriately about us. Of course, the action scenes worked the best, but even quieter scenes displayed a good sense of environment and involvement.
Sound quality also appeared solid. Dialogue was crisp and distinct. Speech showed no signs of edginess or any problems related to intelligibility.
Effects were always clear and dynamic, plus they displayed virtually no signs of distortion even when the volume level jumped fairly high; throughout explosions, crashes, and various engines, the track stayed clean.
Music sounded appropriately bright and accurate and portrayed the score appropriately. The mix featured some pretty solid bass at times as the entire affair seemed nicely deep. All in all, the soundtrack worked well for the material and didn’t disappoint.
How did the Blu-ray compare with the DVD version? The lossless audio felt a bit warmer and fuller than the DVD’s Dolby 5.1 track.
Visuals also brought the expected upgrade, as the Blu-ray seemed better defined and smoother than the DVD. While the DVD worked well for its format, it didn’t compete with the Blu-ray.
When we head to the supplements, we launch with an audio commentary from writer/director Shane Acker, animation director Joe Ksander, head of story Ryan O’Loughlin and editor Nick Kenway. All four sit together for this running, screen-specific look at the storytelling and characters, the flick’s tone and visual design, cast and performances, animation issues, music, and a few other production areas.
While the quartet of commentators get into things in a reasonably good manner, I can’t say this ever becomes a particularly insightful track. We find a lot of fairly general notes and too much praise as well. We do get a decent amount of info here, but don’t expect anything especially vivid or memorable.
The disc allows us to see 9 - The Original Short. It runs 10 minutes, 33 seconds and shows “9” and “5” as they fight the beast.
I think it works better than the feature film. The short goes with wordless characters and creates a good mood and sense of intrigue, whereas the full-length version is a lot more conventional.
We can view the short with or without commentary from Acker and Ksander. They give us some facts about the film and its creation. With such a brief running time, they don’t get to say much, but they add some nice insights.
Five Deleted Scenes fill a total of seven minutes, 24 seconds. These include “The Truth Revealed” (1:23), “Throw Me the End of Your Rope” (1:37), “The Fall Out” (1:20), “Taking the Offensive” (1:25) and “The Scientist’s Legacy” (1:39).
All of these appear as story reels; these combine storyboards with basic music, sound and dialogue. “Truth” provides a bit more exposition about how the machines conquered the world, while “Rope” offers a smidgen of action.
“Fall Out” shows reactions to 9’s actions, “Offensive” gives us deliberations between 1 and 9, and “Legacy” throws out a little more for the epilogue. All of the clips are reasonably interesting, but none of them add much to the experience, so I can’t say any of them would’ve changed things for the better.
Three featurettes follow. 9 - The Long and The Short of It lasts 16 minutes, 28 seconds and provides notes from Acker, O’Loughlin, Ksander, supervising animator Kristin Solid, producers Timur Bekmambetov, Tim Burton and Jim Lemley, screenwriter Pamela Pettler, story artist Regina Conroy, production designer Robert J. St. Pierre, visual effects supervisor Jeff Bell, and actors Elijah Wood, Jennifer Connelly, Crispin Glover, and Martin Landau.
“Long” looks at the creation of the original 9 short as well as the development of the feature film. “Long” occasionally touches on material heard elsewhere, but it usually gives us new info, and it covers the production’s genesis pretty well. The show gives us a nice recap of the various issues.
The Look of 9 goes for 13 minutes, 12 seconds and features Acker, Wood, Bekmambetov, St. Pierre, Pettler, Lemley, Burton, O’Loughlin, Conroy, Ksander, Solid, head of production Matthew Teevan, supervising animators Morgan Ginsberg, Daryl Graham, Adam Beck and Charlie Bonifacio, art director/DP Kevin R. Adams, art director Christophe Vacher, effects supervisor Warren Lawtey and animation department head David Baas.
This program looks at the film’s visual design in terms of sets, characters, and cinematography. Despite a little too much self-congratulation, we still get good details in this short but informative piece.
Acting Out runs four minutes, 53 seconds and includes statements from Acker, Ksander, Baas, Beck, Bonifacio, Graham, and Solid.
Though I thought this program would look at the voice talent, instead it focuses on the work of the character animators. It does well in that regard, as it shows interesting footage to demonstrate the animators’ efforts.
New to the Blu-ray, U-Control
offers a picture-in-picture component. It mixes art/storyboards, behind the scenes footage and comments from Acker, Wood, Pettler, Burton, Landau, Lemley, Glover and O’Laughlin.
“U-Control” looks at story/characters, cast and performances, various design choices and animation. Universal’s “U-Control” programs tend to be spotty, but this ends up as one of the better entries.
That said, I never warmed up to the format. A simple “making of” featurette would become a better presentation of the material. While we get some good insights, the way we access the footage remains clunky.