The Long Dark Trail appears in an aspect ratio of 2.39:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. The movie brought a good but unexceptional presentation.
Overall delineation felt largely positive. Occasional lower-light shots tended to seem a bit on the soft side, but these didn’t dominate, so the majority of the flick appeared pretty well-defined.
No issues with jagged edges or shimmering materialized, and I saw no edge haloes. Print flaws remained absent.
Colors leaned toward a mix of greens, ambers and blues. The hues could feel somewhat dense, but they worked fine within the movie’s visual confines.
Blacks seemed fairly deep and tight, while shadows came across as smooth and clear. Expect a mostly positive image.
As for the movie’s Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack, it lost points due to its lossy nature. In 2023, no Blu-ray should lack a lossless option.
Outside of that drawback, this became largely pleasing mix, with a soundfield that emphasized general atmosphere. However, some more violent scenes added zing to the impression.
As such, the soundfield sporadically kicked to life. Otherwise it showed positive stereo spread for music and formed a satisfactory impression of the different locations.
Audio quality worked fine, with speech that seemed natural and concise. Music showed nice warmth and range.
Effects also appeared accurate and full. Even with the lossy nature of the mix, the track worked pretty well.
A few extras round out the disc, and Bloopers/Behind the Scenes runs three minutes, 47 seconds. It provides a forgettable collection of shots from the set.
Artist RL Black goes for one minute, 39 seconds and features writer/director/actor Nick Psinakis. He tells us a little about the graphic novel adaptation by Black in this brief promo piece.
A Slideshow spans two minutes, 37 seconds and brings s running montage of stills. It shows 33 shots from the movie and the production to become a decent compilation.
In addition to the trailer for The Long Dark Trail, we locate some Previews. These give us ads for The Ghosts of Monday, Frost, AK Tolstoy’s A Taste of Blood, Escape from Area 51, Baphomet and Scavenger.
As a low-budget indie horror movie, The Long Dark Trail manages to look and sound professional. Unfortunately, it tells a terribly dull story and also suffers from amateurish acting. The Blu-ray comes with generally positive picture and audio but only sports minor bonus materials. Don’t expect any thrills from this forgettable slice of horror.