Despicable Me 4 appears in an aspect ratio of 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. No issues materialized here.
Sharpness satisfied. As expected from an animated flick, the image showed nice clarity.
I noticed no issues with jagged edges or shimmering, and edge enhancement appeared to be absent. No source flaws came with the transfer, as the movie lacked any form of defects.
Colors went with a somewhat subdued pastel feel, though matters broadened to more dynamic hues when appropriate. Within those parameters, the colors looked positive, so the various tones came across as clear and well-developed.
Blacks also seemed dark and firm, while low-light shots offered good delineation. Across the board, this became a satisfying image.
As for the movie’s Dolby Atmos soundtrack, it opened up the film in a satisfying manner. Downconverted to Dolby TrueHD 7.1, the mix didn’t give us wall-to-wall theatrics, but it managed to use the spectrum well.
As expected, the film’s action sequences boasted nice breadth and activity, and crowd elements created a fine sense of involvement. While the soundscape didn’t stun us on a consistent basis, it provided more than enough to succeed.
Audio quality seemed consistently solid. Speech appeared natural and distinctive, and no edginess or other issues marred the dialogue.
Music sounded warm and full, while effects showed good clarity and accuracy. When necessary, bass response came across as deep and tight. All of this lifted the track to “B+” status.
All prior home video releases in this franchise included Mini-Movies, and that trend continues here. We find Game Over and Over (four minutes, 19 seconds) and Benny’s Birthday (4:01).
In the first, a Minion finds and uses a special videogame controller that allows him to play in real life, while in Birthday, his fellow Minions force Benny to celebrate whether he wants to do so or not. Both seem entertaining enough, especially since Birthday pursues an unusual Groundhog Day-style concept.
Nine Deleted/Extended/Alternate Scenes occupy a total of 14 minutes, 25 seconds. We find more from Gru’s school reunion as well as additional Minions antics and Gru and his infant son.
None of these snippets further narrative or character development, as they mostly play like random bits of comedy without much real connection to the story. Still, fans will enjoy them.
A few featurettes follow, and Despicable Dialogue goes for three minutes, 37 seconds as it shows the actors at work in the recording studio. I enjoy this sort of material so this turns into a fun little reel.
Meet the Cast breaks into seven clips with a total of 22 minutes, 16 seconds. Across these, we hear from producer/Illumination founder Chris Meledandri, director Chris Renaud, editor Tiffany Hillkurtz, co-writer Ken Daurio, co-director Patrick Delage, layout cinematography supervisor Maxime Devanlay, CG supervisors Boris Jacq and Richard Adenot, animation directors Aymeric Palermo and Pierre-Francois Duhamel, character animator Charlotte Kristof, and actors Steve Carell, Kristen Wiig, Joey King, Miranda Cosgrove, Dana Gaier, Madison Polan, Stephen Colbert, Chloe Fineman, Sofia Vergara and Will Ferrell.
As expected, they talk about characters and performances. I like the shots from the actors’ sessions but otherwise the “Cast” segments lean toward praise for the actors.
Next comes a Making of program. It runs 10 minutes, 57 seconds and delivers info from Carell, Wiig, Daurio, Meledandri, Hillkurtz, Ferrell, Renaud, King, Delage, Kristof,, Jacq, Adenot, Duhamel, Devanlay, Palermo, art director Charlotte Hutchinson, surfacing character supervisor Benjamin Fournet, set dressing supervisor Laura Giardini and compositing supervisor Romain Blanchet.
The featurette looks at story/characters and the evolution of the series, cast and performances, the creative team, storyboarding and art direction, and animation. “Making” tears through production elements in a manner that emphasizes happy talk over insights.
Mega Minion Mayhem goes for four minutes, 22 seconds. It features Carell, Cosgrove, Wiig, Vergara, Ferrell, Daurio, Renaud, Palermo, Duhamel, King, Devanlay, Jacq, Hutchinson, character rigging supervisor Hassan Bensmaine, production supervisor Alexandra Skinazi-Francart, head of story Habib Louati and hair and fur supervisor Emmanuelle de Amezaga.
This one discusses the development of the movie’s “Mega Minions”. Once again, fluff overwhelms facts.
With Rogues Gallery, we find a three-minute, 38-second segment that provides a basic overview of some movie characters. It seems unnecessary but it also feels harmless.
Finally, How to Draw breaks into five components with a total running time of 12 minutes, 11 seconds. These instruct viewers how to sketch each of the five “Mega Minion” characters.
Head of Story Habib Louati leads us through the demonstration. This turns into a fun look at design choices.
In an interesting touch, “Draw” can be followed either via Louati’s original French dialogue or looped English speech from someone else.
14 years into the franchise and Despicable Me 4 finds a film series without direction. This one tosses out roughly 283 different story beats that barely connect and fail to generate much entertainment. The Blu-ray boasts strong picture and audio as well as a mediocre set of supplements. Maybe Despicable Me 5 will bounce back but I doubt it.