Justice League: Crisis On Infinite Earths – Part Two appears in an aspect ratio of 1.78:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. Overall, the image looked positive.
Sharpness seemed terrific. Virtually no sharpness materialized, so the movie remained accurate and concise.
No issues with shimmering or jaggies materialized, and I saw no edge haloes or noise reduction. Of course, I found no print flaws here.
With the palette of Crisis, we got a pretty broad, vivid set of hues. The colors seemed fine, as they represented their intended schemes.
Blacks were deep and dark, while shadows looked smooth and clear. This became a pretty great image.
When I examined the DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack of Crisis, it created a fine sense of action. The movie packed a fair amount of battles and involving material, and it used the five channels to impart that information in a lively manner.
Explosions and fights filled the channels to create a full spectrum, and quieter elements fleshed out the room as well.
Across the board, the material sounded good. Speech remained distinctive and concise, without edginess, and music seemed vivid and full.
Effects appeared accurate and tight, with clear highs and some powerful lows. All in all, the mix worked nicely.
Two featurettes appear here. Voices in Crisis runs eight minutes, 19 seconds and brings notes from actors Meg Donnelly, Jonathan Adams and Aldis Hodge.
As implied by the title, this program looks at cast and performances. We get a good perspective on the challenges that come with voice acting.
The Bat-Family of the Multiverse goes for eight minutes, 25 seconds. It involves DC writer Geoff Johns, DC Group editor Katie Kubert, writer Jim Krieg, DC archivist Benjamin LeClear, director Jeff Wamester, and executive producer Butch Lukic.
We get an overview of the way Crisis treats Batman and related roles. It gives us some useful background.
Finally, we encounter a Part Three Sneak Peek. It runs one minute, 19 second and simply offers a form of trailer to promote the saga’s final chapter.
As the middle of three chapters, Justice League: Crisis On Infinite Earths – Part Two can feel a little disjointed. Still, it moves along the overall narrative in a reasonably effective manner. The Blu-ray comes with strong picture and audio but only minor bonus materials. Part Two pushes us toward the saga’s finale in a generally positive way.