The American Society of Magical Negroes appears in an aspect ratio of 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. The film came with an excellent image.
Sharpness looked nice. No real softness emerged, so the flick remained accurate and concise.
No concerns with jagged edges or shimmering occurred, and edge enhancement remained absent. Source flaws also failed to create problems.
In terms of colors, Society opted for a mix of orange/amber and teal, though we got a smidgen of purple as well. Within those constraints, the hues felt well-reproduced.
Blacks were deep and firm, while shadows showed good delineation. Overall, this was a highly pleasing presentation.
I thought that the DTS-HD MA 7.1 soundtrack of Society seemed fine but it didn’t excel because of a lack of ambition. Given the nature of the story, the movie featured a limited soundfield that favored the forward channels. It showed nice stereo spread to the music as well as some general ambience from the sides.
Panning was fine, and the surrounds usually kicked in basic reinforcement. A few scenes opened up better, though, like those related to the character’s magic. However, most of the movie stayed with limited imaging.
Audio quality appeared good. Speech was natural and distinct, with no issues related to edginess or intelligibility. Effects sounded clean and accurate, with good fidelity and no signs of distortion.
Music was perfectly fine, as the score and songs showed positive dimensionality. This track was good enough for a “B“ but didn’t particularly impress.
A few extras appear, and we get an audio commentary from writer/director Kobi Libii. He offers a running, screen-specific discussion of story, characters, and themes, cast and performances, sets and locations, effects and visual design, music and audio, and connected topics.
Overall, Libii offers a pretty solid chat. He covers a good array of domains so outside of occasional lulls, this turns into a quality overview.
Three featurettes follow, and Secret Society Members goes for five minutes, 20 seconds. It brings info from Libii, producers Eddie Vaisman, Angel Lopez and Julia Lebedev, and actors Justice Smith, An-Li Bogan, David Alan Grier, Nicole Byer and Drew Tarver.
“Members” examines the movie’s themes as well as cast and performances. We get lots of happy talk but few insights.
Crafting a Magical Society runs four minutes, 14 seconds. It features Libii, Smith, Grier, director of photography Doug Emmett, production designer Laura Fox, and costume designer Derica Cole Washington.
Here we get notes about cinematography, sets and locations, and costumes. It becomes a decent little take on those domains.
Finally, Speaking Your Truth spans four minutes, 14 seconds. This one delivers info from Libii, Smith, Bogan, Byer, and Grier.
“Truth” gets into the project’s origins and development, themes and tone. We find a couple useful thoughts along with a lot of self-congratulation.
As an attempt to mock Hollywood tropes, The American Society of Magical Negroes comes with potential. However, it lacks the bite it needs to really click. The Blu-ray comes with excellent visuals, good audio and a mix of supplements. While the movie offers decent entertainment, its relative softness means it disappoints.