The Son appears in an aspect ratio of 2.39:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. This became an appealing presentation.
Overall sharpness seemed solid. A couple of wide shots looked a smidgen soft, but those were the exception to the rule, as the majority of the flick was accurate and detailed.
No issues with jagged edges or shimmering occurred, and I noticed no edge haloes. Source flaws were absent, as the movie looked consistently clean.
The Son gave us a teal-oriented palette, with some amber as well. Within those parameters, the hues were positive.
Blacks seemed deep and dark, while shadows showed good smoothness and clarity. I felt happy with the transfer.
In regard to the DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack of The Son, I couldn’t find much to stand out as memorable. I expected that, though, since I wouldn’t anticipate a wild experience from this sort of character drama.
The soundfield focused on the front spectrum, and music presented the most prominent element. The score showed good stereo imaging, and we got general ambience – mainly from street scenes - but that was about it.
When the surrounds played a part, I they added environmental reinforcement and nothing else. This was a low-key experience.
Audio quality was fine. Speech sounded distinctive and natural, without edginess or other issues.
Effects didn’t have much to do, but they were acceptable for what they offered. Music appeared full and rich. There wasn’t enough here to merit a grad above a “B-“, though, so don’t expect a memorable soundtrack.
Bringing The Son to the Screen runs 10 minutes, 40 seconds. It involves notes from writer/director Florian Zeller, producers Iain Canning and Joanna Laurie, co-writer Christopher Hampton, production designer Simon Bowles, and actors Hugh Jackman, Zen McGrath, Laura Dern, and Vanessa Kirby.
The featurette looks at story/characters, the source and its adaptation, cast and performances, sets and locations, and general thoughts. A few useful notes emerge, but most of the program feels superficial.
The disc opens with ads for The Father, The Duke, Mothering Sunday, Living and The Phantom of the Open. We also find the trailer for The Son.
A character drama that focuses on generational family dysfunction, The Son wastes a good cast. The film fails to find anything new to say and gets bogged down in unlikable personalities. The Blu-ray boasts strong visuals, adequate audio and minor bonus materials. The film winds up as a trite bore.