Mega Time Squad appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.35:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. I thought the Blu-ray provided consistently satisfying visuals.
Sharpness was generally positive. A smidgen of softness appeared in some interiors, but those instances were minor. Instead, the program demonstrated nice clarity and accuracy the vast majority of the time.
I witnessed no instances of jagged edges or shimmering, and edge haloes appeared absent. Source flaws also failed to interfere.
Colors stayed fairly subdued for the most part. The settings didn’t favor a dynamic palette, but the hues looked reasonably accurate and full, with a not-unexpected emphasis on teal, amber and orange.
Blacks were acceptably dark and deep, while shadows showed generally positive delineation. Overall, I found this to be a strong presentation.
As for the DTS-HD MA 5.1 audio of Squad, it worked pretty well. Not as much of an action extravaganza as one might expect, the soundscape doesn’t offer a whole lot of note.
A few scenes – like time travel and a few violent bits – opened up the mix in a moderate way. However, this was a chatty/comedic movie overall, though, so one shouldn’t expect much from the soundfield.
Audio quality always appeared positive. Music showed warm, full tones, and effects – as low-key as they were – sounded accurate and concise.
Speech was an important factor that worked fine; the lines were consistently distinctive and natural. Nothing here dazzled, but the audio remained more than acceptable.
A few extras appear here, and we find an audio commentary from writer/director Tim Van Dammen. He offers a running, screen-specific look at the project’s roots and path to the screen, story and characters, music, editing, photography, cast and performances, sets and locations, and related topics.
We get a fairly good discussion of the film, as Van Dammen touches on a nice array of subjects and an informative manner. He loses some steam as the track goes, but this still becomes a useful chat.
11 Deleted Scenes fill a total of 14 minutes, 12 seconds. Easily the longest comes from an “Alternate Opening”, as it runs four minutes, two seconds. It’s not all that “alternate”, though, as it largely just moves the folklore about the amulet to the start of the movie instead of the middle.
The remaining scenes feel uninspiring. Many just slightly extend existing sequences, and the new shots pad out characters in a minor way. Nothing noteworthy appears here.
The disc opens with ads for Black As Sin, The Dark, Level 16 and White Chamber. We also locate a trailer for Squad.
Blessed with a clever plot, Mega Time Squad only sporadically lives up to its potential. Nonetheless, it does enough right to become a mostly fun action-adventure. The Blu-ray brings good picture and audio along with a few good supplements. Squad ends up as a minor pleasure.