The Infiltrator appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.40:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. Don’t expect many problems from this positive presentation.
Overall sharpness looked fine. A few wide shots looked a smidgen, but those occurred infrequently, so the majority of the flick came across as accurate and well-defined. Shimmering and jaggies failed to appear, and edge haloes remained absent. Print flaws also never popped up in this clean transfer.
Infiltrator went with a stylized palette that favored big, garish tones. It used some of the standard orange and teal, but it also developed heavy greens and yellows. These looked solid within the flick’s design. Blacks seemed tight and dense, and low-light shots provided strong smoothness and clarity. Only the minor soft spots knocked this down to “B+” consideration.
Though without constant razzmatazz, Infiltrator came with a reasonable DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundfield. It used all the channels to blast music at us, and appropriate effects cropped up around the spectrum in a convincing manner. Those elements meshed together in a concise way and helped give us a good sense of place and events.
Audio quality satisfied. Music was bright and bold, while speech came across as natural and distinctive. Effects seemed accurate and dynamic, with clean highs and deep lows. This was a more than competent complement to the visuals.
Among the set’s extras, we get an audio commentary from directo Brad Furman and actor Bryan Cranston. Both sit together for a running, screen-specific look at story/characters/screenplay, locations and sets, music and editing, cast and performances, and related domains.
Overall, Furman and Cranston provide a largely good commentary. At no point does this threaten to become a truly engaging chat, but I can’t claim to find obvious flaws in it either. The discussion covers the appropriate areas and does so in a fairly enjoyable manner.
Five Deleted Scenes run a total of eight minutes, 52 seconds. These offer character moments that tend to show the impact the job has on the Feds. Though decent on their own, they feel redundant in the context of the broader film.
Two featurettes follow. The Three Bobs lasts three minutes, 18 seconds and involves Cranston and former federal agent Robert Mazur. “Bobs” brings us an overview of the various “characters” the movie’s lead needs to adopt. “Bobs” gives us a couple of decent notes but seems too brief to do much.
How to Infiltrate goes for five minutes, 51 seconds and offers remarks from Cranston, Mazur, former agents Emir Abreau and Kathy Ertz, and actors John Leguizamo, Benjamin Bratt, and Diane Kruger. “Infiltrate” devotes itself to notes about how the agents do their jobs. Like “Bobs”, this one boasts some good material but its short length harms it.
The disc opens with ads for A Walk in the Woods, 99 Homes, Break Point and Knight of Cups. Also from Broadgreen adds promos for Learning to Drive, Last Days in the Desert, I Smile Back, The Dark Horse and Song of Lahore. No trailer for Infiltrator appears here.
A story about the 1980s drug trade, The Infiltrator falls flat. It fails to deliver a coherent narrative and it lacks much to make it interesting. The Blu-ray presents good picture and audio along with a reasonable collection of bonus materials. Infiltrator winds up as a snoozer.