Westworld appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.78:1 on these Blu-ray Discs – mainly, as occasional scenes used a 2.35:1 ratio. Did Season Two look or sound any different than Season One? No, so please enjoy this lazy rehash of comments from my prior review.
Sharpness worked well. While the occasional wide shot betrayed a sliver of softness, the majority of material appeared accurate and concise. No issues with moiré effects or jaggies occurred, and I saw neither edge haloes nor source flaws.
Despite the Western setting, the series favored a fairly teal and orange palette – though on the dusty brown side of things. Within the stylistic constraints, the Blu-rays reproduced them in a favorable manner.
Blacks came across as deep and dense, while shadows – important in such a dark series – appeared smooth and well-developed. The shows offered pleasing picture quality.
The series’ DTS-HD MA 5.1 audio also satisfied. Music showed nice stereo presence, while effects added immersive material. The series’ occasional action sequences boasted fine use of the side and rear speakers, all of which brought us into the episodes well.
Audio quality seemed strong. Music was full and rich, while dialogue seemed natural and distinctive.
Effects offered clear elements with warm, tight lows. I liked the soundtrack across these episodes.
All of the package’s extras appear on Disc Three, and we begin with The Truth Behind Delos. It goes for 12 minutes, 40 seconds and includes comments from series creators Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy and actors Jeffrey Wright, Evan Rachel Wood, Shannon Woodward, Katja Herbers, Rodrigo Santoro, and Gustaf Skarsgård.
“Truth” looks at story/character areas and thoughts about how the series reflects current society. It proves to be moderately insightful and provocative.
With These Violent Delights Have Violent Ends, we get an 11-minute, 11-second reel with Wood, Nolan, Joy, and actors Tessa Thompson, Ed Harris, Thandie Newton and James Marsden.
“Ends” views the movie’s use of violence and some cinematic influences and choices. It becomes another reasonably compelling piece.
Bring Yourself Back Online contains three programs: “Reflections on Season Two” (14:51), “Of Love and Shogun” (15:19) and “Journeys and Technology” (15:19). Each one offers a panel hosted by actors Leonardo Nam and Ptolemy Slocum.
“Reflections” features Wright, Wood, Marsden, “Shogun” brings Newton, Santoro, and actor Simon Quarterman, and “Journeys” offers actors Angela Sarafyan, Ben Barnes and Luke Hemsworth.
The “Online” segments cover characters/story/themes as well as cast and performances. Some decent insights result, but these segments come with too much happy talk to turn substantial.
Finally, Creating Westworld’s Reality consists of 10 featurettes: “The Drone Hosts” (3:23), “An Evocative Location” (3:23), “Fort Forlorn Hope” (5:31), “The Delos Experiment” (5:59), “Shogun World” (12:57), “Inside the Cradle” (4:47), “Chaos in the Mesa” (5:28), “Ghost Nation” (3:19), “Deconstructing Maeve” (3:31), and “The Valley Beyond” (11:42).
Through these, we find info from Nolan, Joy, Wright, Wood, Sarafyan, Woodward, Newton, Quarterman, Santoro, Thompson, Barnes, Herbers, production designer Howard Cummings, visual effects on set supervisor Bruce Branit, special make-up effects artist Kevin Kirkpatrick, special makeup effects designer Justin Raleigh, writer Carly Wray, supervising location manager Mandi Dillin, key assistant location manager Tada Chae, additional photographer John Grillo, executive producers Roberto Patino and Richard J. Lewis, set decorator Julie Ochipinti, special effects supervisor Michael Lantieri, special effects foreman Dave Pahoa, special effects coordinator Alan Roberts, visual effects supervisor Jay Worth, art director Jon Carlos, costume designer Sharen Davis, head dyer Francine LeCoultre, key makeup artist Elisa Marsh, hair department head Joy Zapata, director Frederick EO Toye, and actors Peter Mullan, Lewis Herthum, Hiroyuki Sanada, Rinko Kikuchi, Zahn McClarnon, Ingrid Bolsø Berdal and Martin Sensmeier.
The pieces offer info about the design and creation of the drone hosts, sets and locations, story/characters, stunts, action and effects, costumes. These jump around a lot, obviously, but they still provide a good mix of details about aspects of the series’ creation.
Though not quite as impressive as the prior year, Season Two of Westworld brings a fairly good run of shows. It meanders a little too much at times but still ends up as a compelling overall narrative. The Blu-rays offer very good picture and audio along with fairly informative supplements. S2 of Westworld works well as a whole.