The Benchwarmers appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. One of the very first Blu-rays to hit the market, the image showed its vintage but nonetheless held up reasonably well.
Sharpness generally worked fine. Although wider shots lacked great clarity, the movie usually seemed fairly concise.
No issues with jagged edges or shimmering occurred, and edge haloes remained absent. I noticed a few minor specks but no major print flaws.
Colors went with a subdued mix of amber and teal. The hues seemed well-depicted for their ambitions.
Blacks were reasonably deep, and low-light shots offered appealing clarity. Nothing here excelled but the image worked fine as a whole.
The PCM 5.1 soundtrack of Benchwarmers offered a decidedly low-key affair, as not much happened to bring the soundfield to life. Music offered reasonably good stereo imaging.
Effects played a minor role. They added some specifics at times, mainly during the baseball scenes, but they didn’t add a ton to the proceedings. The surrounds broadened the spectrum in a moderate way at most.
Audio quality was fine. Speech seemed natural and concise, and I noticed no problems with the dialogue.
Effects were clear and accurate, even if they did stay in the background. A few scenes like big home run blasts popped the subwoofer to life.
Music consistently seemed good as well. This was a serviceable soundtrack.
How did the Blu-ray compare to the DVD version? The lossless audio felt a little more dimensional, but the subdued nature of the mix limited its improvements.
Visuals showed improvements, as the Blu-ray looked better defined, with stronger colors and superior blacks/shadows. Even with the less than stellar aspects of the image, it worked better than the blah DVD.
As for the extras, we start with two separate audio commentaries. The first comes from director Dennis Dugan in the form of a running, screen-specific discussion that goes over the cast and their work, locations, visual issues like CG, and sets.
Like the movie itself, Dugan’s commentary is erratic. It comes with a few decent insights such as information about improvised lines and other character issues, but the director also subjects us to a lot of banality. He frequently does little more than tell us the names of actors and how much he likes them.
Dugan even recognizes this tendency in himself, but he still does it anyway. The commentary tells us a little about the flick but sticks us with too much lackluster content to make it a genuinely worthwhile discussion.
For the second track, we get notes from actors David Spade and Jon Heder, both of whom sit together for their own running, screen-specific piece. They discuss… not a whole heck of a lot.
They give us a few notes about their work on the set and general anecdotes about their activities. This means lots of joking around and very little concrete information.
To a degree, that’s fine. In particular, Spade throws out a fair amount of amusing barbs as he makes the track generally enjoyable.
However, we have to suffer through a lot of praise for the flick in addition to the fact we just don’t learn much. It’s a painless listen with occasional moments of merriment but not a memorable chat.
Four featurettes follow. Nerds Vs. Bullies goes for five minutes, 48 seconds as it brings notes from Spade, Heder, writer/co-producer/co-writer Nick Swardson, and actors Rob Schneider, Jon Lovitz, Reggie Jackson, Amaury Nolasco, Alex Warrick, Tim Meadows, Bill Romanowski, and Craig Kilborn.
They talk about whether they were nerds or bullies as kids and their thoughts about the topic. It’s not an especially interesting program, and it sure doesn’t tell us anything useful.
A focus on Reggie Jackson comes in the eight-minute, 15-second Mr. October featurette. We get notes from Schneider, Lovitz, Nolasco, Jackson, Dugan, Heder, Spade, and actors Sean Salisbury, Max Prado, and Molly Sims.
The various participants gush about how much they love Reggie, which Jackson tells us how he came onto the film and how he worked as an actor. He also chats about his childhood training. Reggie’s parts offer some decent insight; it can be interesting to find out how a non-actor goes into these things. However, there’s not much depth on display, as the show usually stays with fluffiness.
Play Ball runs six minutes, six seconds as it presents Heder, Swardson, Kilborn, Nolasco, Romanowski, Dugan, Salisbury, Meadows, Jackson, Sims, Schneider, Lovitz, and Spade.
The participants chat about their feelings toward baseball. As with “Nerds”, you won’t learn much about the film. It’s a general program without much to make it worthwhile.
For the final featurette, we get the two-minute, 43-second Who’s On Deck? It includes nothing more than a montage of “Howie” scenes.
What’s the point? I’m not sure, but if you really dig “Howie”, then this is the place for you.
Four Deleted Scenes run between 15 seconds and one minute, five seconds. These fill a total of two minutes, 52 seconds.
That ain’t much, and you’ll not find anything memorable in these snippets. “Rod and Beans” and “Talk of the Truck Stop” let us see a little more of Gus’s wife, but they don’t offer much for her to do.
“Bad Reggie” shows the Hall of Famer’s punishment for mailbox destruction, while “Ball Sweatin’ Goldies” is a brief shot of a disgruntled video store customer. All four scenes are painless, and all are forgettable.
Previews includes promos for Click and RV. No trailer for Benchwarmers appears here.
Fans of Adam Sandler’s work will probably dig The Benchwarmers. It doesn’t star the actor, but it sticks with his usual MO as it mixes clever moments with crass ones. This leaves it as terribly erratic and only sporadically amusing. The Blu-ray comes acceptable picture as well as adequate audio along with a decent set of extras. This is a watchable entry for those who enjoy the Sandler style of comedy.
To rate this film, visit the DVD review of BENCHWARMERS