The Wolfman appears in an aspect ratio of 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. This became a good but not exceptional presentation.
For the most part, sharpness seemed satisfying. However, occasional instances of mild softness arose, and those created small distractions at times.
Neither moiré effects nor jagged edges cropped up here, and I saw no edge haloes. Print flaws remained absent.
Wolfman went with a heavily teal palette, along with ample dollops of amber. Within those constraints, the hues seemed well-reproduced.
Blacks were pretty deep and dense, while shadows appeared mostly smooth, though some murkiness occasionally arose. This turned into a pleasing image, even if it didn’t dazzle.
With plenty of action on display via the movie’s DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack, all the channels received a good workout. Music demonstrated appealing presence, while effects manifested from logical spots and blended together nicely as well.
Audio quality satisfied, with speech that appeared concise and natural. Music seemed full and lush as well.
Effects boasted solid clarity and accuracy, with fine low-end along the way. This turned into a more than satisfactory soundtrack.
The disc includes both the film’s theatrical version (1:42:25) as well as an unrated cut (1:59:05). What does that extra 17 minutes provide?
Some of the extra footage comes from extended scenes, but plenty of unique bits appear as well. For instance, “Unrated” allows Lawrence and Gwen to meet much earlier, and we also get an intriguing sequence on a train between Lawrence and a mysterious stranger played by Max Von Sydow.
Of course, we get more graphic violence as well. The “Unrated” cut feels like the superior one, even if the additions mean some odd continuity issues at times.
As we look at the set’s extras, U-Control provides two domains. “Take Control” delivers occasional branching video that mixes shots from the set and comments from creature designer Rick Baker, cinematographer Shelly Johnson and visual effects producer Karen Murphy.
Across “Take”, we get trivia as well as notes about sets and locations, photography, cast and performances, and various visual effects. Some good material appears but the format seems clunky.
“Legacy, Legend and Lore” brings a mix of picture-in-picture material, text and narration links the 2010 film to its 1941 predecessor as well as other horror flicks. Like “Take”, it comes with some worthwhile notes, but “Lore” also feels too spotty to prosper.
A standard text trivia track would’ve worked better. That seems especially true because “Lore” makes it impossible to watch the movie and follow it in a blended manner.
In addition to two Alternate Endings (7:58), we find five Deleted/Extended Scenes (11:17). The “Endings” follow the same path as the actual finale except they cap the movie in different – and darker – ways, especially for the second one.
As for the various “Scenes”, they add some exposition and character material along with a bit more violence. None of them seem especially memorable.
Featurettes follow, and Return of The Wolfman lasts 12 minutes, 20 seconds. It offers notes from director Joe Johnston, writer David Self, producer Scott Stuber, and actors Hugo Weaving, Anthony Hopkins, Emily Blunt, Benicio Del Toro.
“Return” examines the 1941 and its adaptation, story/characters, cast and performances, and themes. A few decent notes emerge but much of “Return” feels superficial.
The Beast Maker runs 12 minutes, five seconds and features Baker, Stuber, Del Toro, Johnston, Hopkins, creature effects creative supervisor Dave Elsey, fabrication and hair supervisor Lou Elsey, and production designer Rick Heinrichs.
Here we learn about the design and execution of the movie’s werewolves. Like the disc’s other pieces, this one offers some information but it tends too much toward happy talk.
Next comes Transformation Secrets, a 15-minute, 15-second piece with info from Johnston, Murphy, visual effects supervisor Steven Begg, digital effects supervisors Arundi Asregadoo and Gary Brozenich, cyberscan technician Sean Varney, and digital effects supervisor Adam Valdez.
As expected, we cover visual effects here, with an emphasis on the shots in which human becomes werewolf. While maybe the best featurette here, “Secrets” nonetheless focuses more on fluff than I’d prefer, so expect another spotty reel.
Finally, The Wolfman Unleashed spans eight minutes, 45 seconds and brings statements from Johnston, Stuber, Del Toro, Baker, Hopkins, stunt coordinator Steve Dent, stunt double Spencer Wilding, fight coordinator CC Smiff, action unit director Vic Armstrong, assistant art director Richard Selway, and special effects supervisor Paul Corbould.
“Unleashed” examines stunts and action. Anticipate another moderately informative but somewhat puffy piece.
As an update on a horror classic, The Wolfman fails to improve on its predecessor. Dull and ponderous, the movie becomes a lackluster bore. The Blu-ray brings pretty positive picture and audio with a largely superficial mix of bonus materials. Don’t expect much from this flat remake.