We Go On appears in an aspect ratio of 1.78:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. This became a generally positive presentation.
Overall sharpness appeared good. Some wider shots tended to lean soft, but these remained in the minority.
I witnessed no signs of jagged edges or moiré effects, and the movie lacked edge haloes. Shot digitally, no source flaws materialized.
Colors leaned toward a dull mix of amber and green. These didn’t stand out as memorable but they suited the story and worked fine.
Blacks seemed deep and rich, while shadows offered fairly appealing delineation. Expect a largely satisfying image.
Similar thoughts greeted the movie’s generally involving DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack. While much of the mix leaned toward general atmosphere, it managed to kick to life on occasion.
This manifested during the more overt “scare” moments as well as some related to planes or cars. Those opened up the soundscape in a pretty lively and engaging manner.
Audio quality worked fine, with speech that sounded distinctive and concise. Music offered appealing range and impact as well.
Effects demonstrated good accuracy and punch, with deep low-end as necessary. I thought this wound up as a pretty good soundtrack.
We find three separate audio commentaries alongside the film, the first of which comes from writer/director Andy Mitton. He delivers a running, screen-specific look at the film’s origins and influences, story/characters, cast and performances, sets and locations, music, and related topics.
At no point does Mitton make this an especially fascinating track, but he covers the appropriate bases. That means enough useful content to ensure the chat deserves a listen.
For the second commentary, we hear from VFX supervisor/director Jesse Holland. He brings us a running, screen-specific discussion of essentially the same topics Mitton examines, though we hear a little more about effects.
Though I wouldn’t call Holland’s commentary redundant, it does follow a lot of the same territory from Mitton’s piece. Mitton and Holland chatted together for the movie’s original Blu-ray release, and that format makes more sense because the two simply touch on too much of the same domains for the separate chats to prosper.
Finally, the third commentary comes from actors Clark Freeman and Annette O’Toole. Both sit together for a running, screen-specific chat about their characters, performances and experiences.
At times, the actors offer some decent memories. However, they don’t tend to tell us much.
I do think Freeman and O’Toole interact in a pleasant manner. Unfortunately, their commentary simply tells us little of us about the production.
Two trailers complete the disc. We get ads for We Go On and Yellowbrickroad.
Note that the 2024 Blu-ray touts a remastered version of We Go On. I believe this meant it updated visual effects mainly.
Thematically, We Go On offers intriguing possibilities. However, it sacrifices most of these in favor of cheap horror movie theatrics too much of the time. The Blu-ray comes with generally good picture and audio as well as three commentaries. I wanted to like the movie but thought it didn’t live up toits potential.