Sleep appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.39:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. This was a good presentation.
Sharpness largely seemed positive, as the majority of the movie offered appropriate delineation. A few mild instances of softness occurred, but most of the film looked concise.
I saw no jagged edges or moiré effects, and edge haloes remained absent. I also noted no signs of source defects.
As expected, colors remained restrained, with a definite orientation toward a light form of teal and amber, though we got some greens and reds at times as well. These hues served the production’s choices.
Blacks seemed fairly deep and firm, while shadows offered pretty good clarity. This came across as a “B+” presentation.
I felt the same about the often subdued DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack, as it focused on the usual scope one associates with creepy horror films. This meant a lot of spooky ambience and not much more.
That said, the mix did kick to life at times. Some of the stabs at scares worked well, as did more action-oriented beats and music provided nice utilization of the channels. The track tossed in nice localized dialogue at times, too.
Audio quality seemed solid. Music was lively and full, while speech appeared natural and concise.
Effects also appeared accurate and dynamic. All of this led to a generally positive soundtrack for a subdued horror tale.
A bunch of extras appear here, and we start with an audio commentary from film historians Kim Newman and Sean Hogan. Both sit together for this running, screen-specific look at story/characters, cast and crew, genre connections, themes and interpretation.
Though veterans of multiple commentaries, Hogan and Newman acknowledge that Sleep differs from their usual subject matter. Normally they handle older films, not new releases.
This leaves them without their usual “film historian topics” to discuss, and they seem a bit at sea through a lot of the commentary. Because they can’t offer the usual retrospective notes about cast/crew and the production, they struggle to find content.
For the most part, they do lean back on their wheelhouse and discuss how they feel Sleep relates to other movies in its genre. Some of this becomes informative.
However, a lot of the commentary comes across as two guys vamping to fill space. Sure they’re two guys who know enough about movies to cover this ground acceptably well, but Newman and Hogan just don’t appear to possess the information necessary to make this a particularly engaging or enlightening chat.
Next we find two visual essays. “A Strange Dark Magic” goes for 16 minutes, 38 seconds and features critic Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, as she discusses themes, meaning and symbolism in the film,
“Sleepwalking Through National Trauma” spans 22 minutes, 13 seconds and offers comments from critic Anton Bitel as he covers other aspects of the movie’s symbols and interpretation. Both Heller-Nicholas and Bitel contribute some useful insights.
Dream & Folktale in Sleep occupies 11 minutes, 13 seconds and provides film professor Louise S. Milne’s notes about folktales and interpretation of the movie. Some of this feels redundant after the two “visual essays”, but Milne provides some worthwhile material.
With This Is No Dream, director Michael Venus and actor Gro Swantje Kohlhof give us a two-minute, 17-second introduction to the Blu-ray version of the film. Nothing substantial occurs, but it comes with some comedic value.
Venus and Kohlhof return for Talking In Their Sleep, a 26-minute, four-second discussion of the movie’s roots and development, influences, cast, characters and performances, some story areas and themes. They offer an engaging chat.
A Dream We Can Dream Together lasts 16 minutes, seven seconds and brings a collection of introductions created for film festivals over the COVID pandemic.
Across these, we see Venus, Kohlhof, writer Thomas Friedrich, and actors Marion Kracht, Andreas Anke, Max Hubacher, and August Schmölzer. Most of these play for laughs and they work well.
Next comes Making Dreams Come True, a two-minute, 46-second glimpse of the movie shoot. It includes some good clips but it’s too short to add up to much.
Four Deleted Scenes take up a total of four minutes, 42 seconds. These essentially provide minor character moments, so don’t expect anything momentous.
One nice touch: text that precedes each scene tells us where the clips would fit into the final film.
Under Marlene’s Sketches, we find 83 frames that show Christoph Vieweg’s art created for the film. It’s good to get a better look at the drawings.
In addition to the film’s trailer, we finish with two Image Galleries: “Promotional Stills and Posters” (23) and “Behind the Scenes” (19). Both offer passable compilations.
A slow burn horror film, Sleep does not consistently satisfy. Still, it creates a fairly evocative tale that keeps us involved until the end. The Blu-ray brings good picture and audio along with a nice array of bonus materials. This turns into a reasonably compelling horror story.