Scrooged appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this 4K UHD Disc. The Dolby Vision image reproduced the source well.
Overall sharpness worked fine. Some softness crept in at times – usually related to visual effects – but most of the movie gave us appropriate delineation.
Neither jagged edges nor moiré effects materialized, and I saw no edge haloes. Grain felt consistent and natural, and I saw no print flaws.
Colors came with some “80s flatness”, but they showed reasonable clarity. HDR added a bit of kick to the tones.
Blacks appeared dark and tight, while low-light shots brought nice clarity. HDR made whites and contrast a little stronger. While it betrayed its 1980s roots, I nonetheless felt the movie looked about as good as one could hope.
As for the DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack of Scrooged, it also showed it age but seemed generally fine. The soundfield offered a moderately engaging affair, though it stayed true to the film’s comic roots.
These kinds of movies usually don’t provide active soundtracks, and while Scrooged had some wild moments due to its supernatural elements, the spectrum usually remained fairly subdued. However, music showed good stereo separation in the front channels, and the score also spread nicely to the surrounds. The forward domain displayed good atmosphere, with clean localization of sounds and smooth integration.
In addition to the usual ambience they added, the rear speakers also kicked in some louder support at times. This track featured a little stereo surround material on occasion, as some atmospheric bits clearly came localized in the back. This wasn’t a dazzling soundfield, but it seemed good given its era and the flick’s genre.
Audio quality was perfectly solid. Dialogue sounded positive, without obvious edginess. Effects could show a bit more range but they lacked distortion or notable problems.
Music sounded surprisingly robust and vivid, as the score became the strongest element here. Although little excelled, this became a more than adequate track for a movie from 1988.
How did this 4K UHD compare to the 30th anniversary Blu-ray from 2018? Audio seemed similar but felt a bit cleaner and more vibrant.
The Dolby Vision image delivered substantial improvements, as the 4K became better defined, more vivid and more natural. The 4K clearly topped the dated Blu-ray.
Note that Scrooged originally hit Blu-ray back in 2011. The 2018 disc simply repackaged that 2011 release, so that means the same comparisons against the 4K apply.
These Blu-rays included only the movie’s trailer, which oddly goes missing here. However, we find a bunch of additional materials, all created/intended for a 2006 DVD that never saw the light of day.
We begin with an audio commentary from director Richard Donner. He offers a running, screen-specific look at sets and locations, cast and performances, cut material, sets and locations, effects, and a few other areas.
Historically, Donner commentaries have been short on content and long on... well, not much. Unfortunately, that trend continued here.
Oh, you'll find the occasional nugget of value, but these appear with extreme infrequency. At most, we might get five minutes of worthwhile information, and acres of dead air occur.
When he talks, Donner makes exciting remarks like "look at that!", "is she a beautiful woman or what?" and - oddly - "we don't talk about lacrosse anymore". Fans who waited 17 years to finally hear the commentary will encounter severe disappointment from this borderline worthless affair.
Featurettes follow, and A Christmas to Remember runs 14 minutes, four seconds. It offers notes from Donner, screenwriter Mitch Glazer, and actors Alfre Woodard, Carol Kane, Bill Murray (from 1988) and John Forsythe (from 1988).
"Remember" looks at the script's path to the screen and Donner's involvement, story/characters, cast and performances, and the film's legacy. We get a few worthwhile notes and I like the shots from the set, but "Remember" leans pretty fluffy most of the time.
Updating Ebenezer spans 13 minutes, 34 seconds. Here we find remarks from Glazer, Donner, Murray (from 1988), Kane and producer Art Linson.
This one covers the origins of the project and the film's modifications to the source. It becomes a fairly tight overview.
Next comes Bringing the Ghosts to Life. In this nine-minute, 53-second reel, we hear from special makeup effects artists Tom and Bari Burman, production designer J. Michael Riva, and special effects coordinator Allen Hall.
Unsurprisingly, "Bringing" examines various effects used on the film and other aspects of the ghosts' depiction. We find a quality little show.
The Look of Scrooged occupies six minutes, 22 seconds. It gives us info from Donner and Riva.
As expected, "Look" discusses sets, locations and visual design. It relies on too many movie clips but still gives us some good details.
After this we get On Set With Bill Murray. This breaks into two segments: “Brother’s Apartment” (3:22) and “Frisbee the Dog” (3:41).
As implied by the title, these sequences take us to the shoot. We see some behind the scenes material and clowning around in these moderately interesting reels.
Finally, we locate two ShoWest Clips with Bill Murray. This array offers “The Best Money Can Buy” (1:15) and “Now Everybody Get Up” (0:59).
Intended to help sell the movie to exhibitors, Murray offers his standard style of comedy. Murray makes these reels fun.
Back in 1988, I expected Scrooged to offer a lively reworking of A Christmas Carol. It seemed disappointing to me back then and hasn’t improved with age; while it delivers mild entertainment, it doesn’t offer enough amusement and creativity to succeed. The 4K UHD comes with solid visuals, good audio and a mixed bag of supplements. I don’t love this movie, but the 4K UHD easily becomes the best version of it released to the home market to date.
To rate this film visit the prior review of SCROOGED