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HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

post #1 of 51
Thread Starter 

300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Directed By: Zack Snyder

Starring: Gerard Butler, Lena Headey, Dominic West, David Wenham, Vincent Regan, Andrew Tiernan, Rodrigo Santoro

Studio: Warner Brothers

Year: 2007

Rated: R

Film Length: 117 minutes

Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1

Subtitles: English, Spanish, French, English SDH

Release Date: July 24, 2007

The Film

Director Zack Snyder's "300" is an adaptation of Frank Miller's graphic novel of the same name that recounts the battle of Thermopylae from 480 BC. Gerard Butler plays Spartan King Leonidas. When an emissary from the Persian Empire arrives demanding that Sparta submit to the authority of Persian Emperor Xerxes (Santoro) and provide the traditional offering of Earth and water, Leonidas responds by throwing him down a well along with his entourage. Bribed "Fifth Column" Persians who hold sway in Greek religious and political institutions forbid Leonidas from leading his army into battle until after the Carneian holiday. Frustrated, he decides to take a contingent of 300 hand-picked "bodyguards" north to meet the invading Persians. His plan is to re-build a wall blockading a road which will force the invading land forces into a narrow pass at Thermopylae. After reinforcing the wall, the Spartans, assisted by less skilled contingents from other Greek city-states, mount a three-day defense against several waves of an overwhelming Persian force while on the home front, Spartan Queen Gorgo (Headey) wades through Greek political waters, polluted by the duplicitous Theron (West), in an effort to gain support for the other city-states to join the defense.

As was the case with Robert Rodriguez's take on "Sin City", rather than simply adapt the plot of Frank Miller's graphic novel, Snyder and his creative team have also chosen to adapt the style, inclusive of many of his frame compositions, the palette employed by Miller's colorist, Lynn Varley, and the hard-boiled tone of Miller's text. Computer graphics and digital grading are used extensively to recreate Miller's highly stylized vision of Ancient Greece as well as the enormous scale of the battles. Even when the filmmakers add elements not originally from the graphic novel, they are rendered in a way that is faithful to Miller's approach and sensibilities. To be fair, they are more successful at capturing Miller's visual style with new images than his authorial voice with new dialog or narration. Even the sense of moving from comic panel to comic panel with one strong pose after another is recreated in some of the battle scenes by alternating between slow motion and regular speed within a single tracking shot.

The result is a visually striking stylized action film about the nature of heroism with a phantasmagoric style that blurs the line between history and mythology. The story is simple in approach and grand in scale, playing something like an opera where virtuoso violence replaces singing. Through the device of using the character of Dilios (Wenham) as a narrator, the script establishes that the story as depicted is one passed on through an oral tradition with the intent of glorifying the 300 Spartans and inspiring other free Greeks. This gives the filmmakers a license to heighten reality to near-mythological proportions which they exploit beyond all reason. The invading Persian forces are exaggerated in scale both in terms of number and, in some cases, individual size. Xerxes himself is portrayed as being almost eight feet tall with a booming modulated voice. The various waves of attackers appear as organized collections of Halloween boogeymen. The pathetic hunchback Ephialtes is portrayed as impossibly grotesque. Swords that have been hacking and slashing all day remain sharp enough to cleanly decapitate with surgical precision. A wolf in the prologue has eyes that literally glow. The moon in one shot takes up over half the sky. Every single Spartan soldier is not only physically fit, but is ultra-lean with chiseled abs (300 six-packs – sounds like a heck of a party). I could go on….

While I enjoyed the excessive stylization, I can also appreciate that some people will find it fatiguing. Viewers with little tolerance for on-screen violence will likely check out after the first forty minutes when the fighting begins. Audience members who are looking for sophistication of plot and dialog will likely be disappointed, as this film's approach to its mythic themes is, predictably, rather spartan.

The cast plays things a bit more theatrical and broad than most modern movie acting, but that is really the only way this kind of material can work. Physically and vocally, Gerard Butler lends a suitably commanding presence to Leonidas, a neat trick as the viewer has to be convinced that his soldiers would follow him into oblivion while he is constantly shouting his dialog. Unlike, say, "Braveheart", Leonidas is given no lengthy "Henry V at Agincourt" inspirational speeches and his close-ups are kept to a reasonable length and frequency. To their credit Lena Headey and Dominic West do a creditable job as Queen Gorgo and traitorous politician Theron. They make their subplot, which plays out miles away from the dominant action of the film's latter two-thirds, intriguing enough to keep the attention of viewers who are otherwise being bombarded with monsters and mayhem.

The Video

The 16:9 enhanced 2.35:1 transfer faithfully reproduces the highly stylized palette based on Lynn Varley's colors from the source graphic novel. Unfortunately, the transfer is plagued by a haze of digital grain that has been a regular issue with Warner standard definition DVD transfers of recent theatrical releases for quite some time. The larger your display, the more evident this digital noise becomes.

The Audio

The English Dolby Digital 5.1 track is immersive and bombastic in keeping with the similar approach to the visuals. Dynamics do the track justice from whispers to screams (quite literally, now that I think about it, since most of the dialog is either whispered or screamed).

The Extras

Spinning up the first disc, the viewer is greeted with skippable promotional trailers for upcoming theatrical films "Trick 'R Treat" and "The Brave One", video game "300: March to Glory", DTV animated movie "Superman: Doomsday", and online video game service "Gametap". All are presented in 4:3 video and Dolby Digital 2.0 sound, with the movie trailers letterboxed to the appropriate aspect ratios.

The only film-related extra on the first disc is an audio commentary by director/co-writer Zack Snyder, co-writer Kurt Johnstad, and DP/Cinematographer Larry Fong. Snyder dominates the track, which is very "nuts and bolts" in nature, focusing largely on how various shots were achieved. It gets to be a pretty dry listen since huge portions of the commentary are given over to indicating what parts of shots were real vs. computer graphics, what shots were straight from the graphic novel, how a handful of sets and props were adapted for repeated use, and declarations that different aspects of the film were "cool".

The majority of the extras are located on the second disc. When this disc is first spun-up, the viewer is greeted with a promotional trailer extolling the benefits of HD-DVD and Blu-ray discs, a promotional clip for the forthcoming "Blade Runner: 25th Anniversary Edition" DVD set with extensive clips from the "Dangerous Days" documentary, and a promotional trailer for NHL DVDs.

All of the film related-extras are presented with English Dolby Digital 2.0 audio with optional French or English SDH subtitles.

First up is The 300: Fact or Fiction. As the title suggests, most of this featurette focuses on how the portrayals of The Battle of Thermopylae as well as Spartan and Greek culture in the film and source graphic novel compare with the historical record. Participants include historians Dr. Victor Davis Hanson and Bettany Hughes, Zack Snyder, Frank Miller, and Gerard Butler. This is one of the more interesting extras on the set. It is presented in 16:9 enhanced video and runs 24 minutes and 31 seconds

Next up is Who Were the Spartans? which expands on the preceding featurette by further elaborating on how the Spartans were portrayed in the film. Participants are the same as the previous featurette with the addition of Rodrigo Santoro and David Wenham. It is presented in 4:3 video letterboxed to approximately 16:9 and runs four minutes and 26 seconds.

The Frank Miller Tapes focuses on comic artist and writer Frank Miller. He discusses his early influences and mentors, his sensibilities, and how they informed his work on the "300" graphic novel. Interview participants include Miller, Snyder, comic creator Neal Adams, President of DC Comics Paul Levitz, and DC Comics Group Editor Bob Schreck. The most amusing exchange is the very last one where Miller asks Snyder on-camera the question at the forefront of all comic book fans' minds: "How the hell are you going to do 'Watchmen'?" This featurette is presented in 16:9 enhanced video and runs 14 minutes and 33 seconds.

The Making of 300 is a brief overview of what the film is about and how it was made that appears to be a standard electronic press kit-style promotional featurette. On-camera interview participants include Snyder, Miller, Butler, Lena Headey, Johnstad, visual effects supervisor Chris Watts, and physical trainer Mark Twight. It runs five minutes and 50 seconds and is presented in 4:3 video.

Making 300 in Images is a hyper-speed montage of behind the scenes footage and photos that gives a number of glimpses into what things looked like before the extensive computer graphics were added. You will likely need to step frame or slow down the video with your DVD remote in order to appreciate the interesting footage included. This featurette runs three minutes and 39 seconds and is presented in 4:3 video letterboxed to 16:9.

Deleted Scenes with Introduction from Director Zack Snyder is exactly what its title suggests. Snyder introduces three scenes and explains why they were cut from the film. All three scenes appear to have substantially completed effects and digital grading work. The first two detail a plot beat where hunchback Ephialtes throws himself off of a cliff after being refused a place in battle by Leonidas and is later revealed to be still alive. These scenes were cut for time. The third scene involves a battle sequence where the Spartan Captain faces a Persian giant with a midget archer on his shoulders. This scene was cut because it was determined to be too fantastic, even by the standards of the rest of the film. The scenes and introductions are presented in letterboxed 4:3 video and run a total of three minutes and 21 seconds. There are no chapter stops or menu options allowing the scenes to be viewed separately.

Finally, a collection of twelve "webisode" featurettes are included addressing various aspects of the film's production. They are presented in 4:3 video usually letterboxed to a 16:9 ratio and run a total of of 38 minutes and 21 seconds if the "Play All" option is selected. Collectively, they present a decent behind the scenes overview of the film and offer a number of perspectives not included in the other featurettes on the disc (as well as a little bit of redundancy). Individual webisodes and interview participants are as follows:
  • Production Design - Production Designer Jim Dissel
  • Wardrobe - Costume Designer Michael Wilkinson
  • Stunt Work - Fight Coordinator Damon Caro, Assistant Stunt Coordinator/Assistant Fight Choreographer Chad Stahblski, Snyder, and Butler
  • Lena Headey - Headey and Butler
  • Adapting the Graphic Novel - Snyder, Miller, and Johnstad
  • Gerard Butler - Butler
  • Rodrigo Santoro - Santoro
  • Training the Actors - Physical Trainer Mark Twight
  • Culture of the Spartan City-State - Actors Wenham, Regan, Miller, Butler, and West
  • A Glimpse from the Set: Making of 300 - Snyder
  • Scene Studies from 300 - Visual Effects Supervisor Chris Watts, Zack Snyder (scenes studied include Xerxes/Leonidas confrontation and "Wall of Death")
  • Fantastic Characters of 300 - Creature Shop Supervisor Mark Rappaport, Special Effects Make-up Supervisor Shaun Smith

Packaging

The discs come in a standard Amaray-style case with a hinged tray allowing it to accommodate both discs. The Plastic case is in turn surrounded by a cardboard slipcase that reproduces the same artwork, but with an embossed front cover. The first disc is a dual-layered RSDL DVD-9 and the second disc is a single-layered DVD-5. There are no inserts.

Summary

While certainly not for everyone, if you have a taste for stylized graphic action violence and operatic Joseph Campbell-style mythic themes, then you will likely enjoy "300". The video transfer is a bit disappointing due to a haze of digital noise that seems to infect the image. More positively, the Dolby Digital 5.1 audio track is impressively dimensional and dynamic. The Two-disc Special Edition DVD is presented with an above average, though not quite comprehensive, collection of extras including a Director/Screenwriter/Cinematographer commentary, brief but fully post-produced deleted scenes, and a collection of featurettes which are largely compiled from the same set of interviews and behind the scenes footage rearranged for different purposes.

Regards,

Gear mentioned in this thread:

post #2 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

does anyone actually realize how bad this movie is? i kept watching the trailer 300 times...i was thinking maybe i'll watch this 3-4 times the day it comes out but no...one time and just one,thank god.
post #3 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Well it was a lot more entertaining than Alexander, what an epic turd that was.

Thanks for the review Ken, will be ordering it soon, extras are a little underwhelming but I suspect this won't be the last time I'll be buying 300.
post #4 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Unless you're talking about some compression-related artifacts, the grain is supposed to be there. It's part of the film's look.
post #5 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by donnie_d
does anyone actually realize how bad this movie is?

Hmmm...

8.1/10 on IMDB
85% from users on Rotten Tomatoes
And about $210 million in US box office

Are you saying ALL those people are wrong?
post #6 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Good work Jason, btw I like your avatar.

And by contrast what did Troy and Alexander get on the Tomatometer? Your honor I rest my case.
post #7 of 51
Thread Starter 

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by Kris Z.
Unless you're talking about some compression-related artifacts, the grain is supposed to be there. It's part of the film's look.
I am not talking about natural film grain. I am talking about the kind of artifacts seen on the SD-DVDs of "Superman", "Blood Diamond", and quite a few other recent Warner releases of new theatrical titles over the last several months.

Regards,
post #8 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Thanks Steve! I am so looking forward to July 31. (Can you tell??)

Troy got 69% from users and Alexander 33%.
post #9 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by donnie_d
does anyone actually realize how bad this movie is?
Good post.
post #10 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken_McAlinden
I am not talking about natural film grain. I am talking about the kind of artifacts seen on the SD-DVDs of "Superman", "Blood Diamond", and quite a few other recent Warner releases of new theatrical titles over the last several months.
I don't know about those other titles, but I remember when I went to see 300 it was covered in what looked like it might have been digitally generated grain, so I still say it's supposed to be there. Of course it's possible that the lower resolution and bitrate of SD-DVD might not have been able resolve the effect properly (haven't seen the disc, and I'm not sure if I will either.)
post #11 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Yeah this had some real heavy grain in the theater so I'm expecting the same. Though I'm not doubting Kens word that ithe DVD has digital artifacting also. Probably is a limitation of SD resolution.

I'll be expecting heavy grain but no artifacts when I get the High Def version.
post #12 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

WB has had very bad digital grain (and compression blocking) on a number of their recent releases including "Happy Feet" and "The Departed."

This is in stark contrast to other recent SD releases from studios that look beautiful ("Night at the Museum" as an example).

My feeling is that this has to do with the fact that WB is format agnostic (they make SD, HD and Blu-Ray) and therefore feel little need to make top-notch SD releases anymore.

Which is sad because they used to be a leader when it came to quality DVD releases.

I wondered if this would be a problem on "300", and apparently it is.

I must say that it stuns me that this movie did so well. People compare this to "Troy" and "Alexander," but those movies sucked so I am not sure what the point is in saying this movie is better than those.

I saw the movie later in its run after all the hype, and I am convinced that it benefitted from being released during a slow box office period. It was interesting, but I am not sure that there is much more appeal than watching the stylized digital look of the movie.

And if the SD release suffers from the digital blocking that "The Departed" suffered from, then that appeal is a moot point.
post #13 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

I had mine on preorder for 2 weeks now. Thanks for the review!
post #14 of 51
Thread Starter 

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by Jonny P
...
My feeling is that this has to do with the fact that WB is format agnostic (they make SD, HD and Blu-Ray) and therefore feel little need to make top-notch SD releases anymore...
...except that their catalog DVDs never seem to have the same kind of artifacts.

By the way, a characteristic of the artifacts that I am seeing is that they are not uniformly distributed but tend to be more intense along high contrast edges and moving objects, which is not how natural grain behaves. Also, I meant to say "Superman Returns" in my earlier post, not "Superman".

Regards,
post #15 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

I thought the movie was just okay.. I prefered troy over it. I never read the comic book/graphic novel.

I liked sin city better.

however I will still get it.

my problem was with the narration.

SPOILER:

the narrator telling how they fought well, when we didn;t need the narration.. we could see that they were fighting well in battle.
post #16 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by donnie_d
does anyone actually realize how bad this movie is? i kept watching the trailer 300 times...i was thinking maybe i'll watch this 3-4 times the day it comes out but no...one time and just one,thank god.

No...I guess I don't realize how bad this movie considering how much I am looking forward to buying this title in HD.

The only thing I DO become emminently cognizant of is how annoyed I get with people who feel they have to thread crap on a reviewers effort to let us know what to expect, which I personally appreciate; even for dvd's I have no intention of buying. It's disrespectful to the reviewer and NObody gives a shit if you liked the movie or not. Thank you.
post #17 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

I thought this forum had a policy against posts exactly like donnie's...

Anyway, I just watched Blood Diamond and noticed the exact kind of MPEG artifacts you're talking about. It was most noticeable on panning shots of forests and other highly detailed scenes... there were noticeable artifacts around the leaves. I've seen this type of thing before and have always assumed it was poorly compressed film grain, which is actually very hard to compress properly and have it look accurate... though many films do, especially these days.

It's sad that it's a trend from WB. I hadn't noticed it on The Departed, but I sat closer to my TV when I watched Blood Diamond. Oh well, I'll get 300 anyway, it's my favorite of the year so far.
post #18 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken_McAlinden
...except that their catalog DVDs never seem to have the same kind of artifacts.

By the way, a characteristic of the artifacts that I am seeing is that they are not uniformly distributed but tend to be more intense along high contrast edges and moving objects, which is not how natural grain behaves. Also, I meant to say "Superman Returns" in my earlier post, not "Superman".

Regards,

I know...it is weird that the catalog titles don't have that problem.
post #19 of 51
Thread Starter 

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

I actually would like to encourage people to post dissenting opinions to my own in any of my review threads. The stuff that bothers me is when it is dismissive and non-specific, which does not add much to the discussion. Saying what you don't like about it is fine and dandy, but suggesting that people who do not like it are somehow incapable of detecting some kind of unspecified badness sounds condescending.

In any case, that's just one reporter's opinion. Post how you like within the forum rules.

Regards,
post #20 of 51
Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Overduin
The only thing I DO become emminently cognizant of is how annoyed I get with people who feel they have to thread crap on a reviewers effort to let us know what to expect
first of all, the reviewer himself qualified his review by including this disclosure(which seemingly takes into account persons like donnie's opinion):
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ken_McAlinden
Audience members who are looking for sophistication of plot and dialog will likely be disappointed, as this film's approach to its mythic themes is, predictably, rather spartan.
post #21 of 51
Quote:
Originally Posted by John Alderson
I thought this forum had a policy against posts exactly like donnie's...
secondly, why should this forum have a policy against posts like donnie's, but allow fan-boy posts that say things like "THIS MOVIE ROCKED! I CAN'T WAIT TO GET THIS!" "THIS WAS THE BEST MOVIE OF 2007!" "THE ACTION WAS AWESOME!"

a policy like that gives a very distorted and misleading view to others reading the posts. balance is good -- welcome to america.
post #22 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bo_Darville
secondly, why should this forum have a policy against posts like donnie's, but allow fan-boy posts that say things like "THIS MOVIE ROCKED! I CAN'T WAIT TO GET THIS!" "THIS WAS THE BEST MOVIE OF 2007!" "THE ACTION WAS AWESOME!"

a policy like that gives a very distorted and misleading view to others reading the posts. balance is good -- welcome to america.

What you dont do is go into a thread and say this movie sucks...and nothing more. If your gonna thread crap at least say why you feel the way you do! You dont see me going into threads i care nothing about and saying "that movie you like sucked hard!" If you feel enough passion to go to a thread at least back up WHY you feel that way. A friend loaned me Hanible Rising, i hated it. When she asked me why i told her i just cant get into the subject matter. Warning: Spoiler! (Click to show)
Kids being eaten when you have frozen solid bodies outside! How did he get back into Soviet controlled areas after having just got out? The guy looks nothing like Anthony Hopkins would have as a kid!
You may not feel like i do, but maybe you could tell me what i missed, or why i was wrong.
"300 SUCKS", yea, thanks, i see your point.

Oh, and Bo please dont think i was saying YOU threadcrap. I just wanted to answer. Also i have to always remember this forum is more than the USA.
post #23 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by RickER
What you dont do is go into a thread and say this movie sucks...and nothing more. If your gonna thread crap at least say why you feel the way you do! You dont see me going into threads i care nothing about and saying "that movie you like sucked hard!" If you feel enough passion to go to a thread at least back up WHY you feel that way.
Exactly. If you came in and said something to the effect of "I didn't like this movie because of the non-stop narration that half the time was describing exactly what was happening on screen, the non-stop slow motion and faux tough guy talk that both became parodies of themselves and the terrible subplot about the wife put into the movie solely for the female demographic." is better than "tHsi mvoie sux!!!@@!!!!"
post #24 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Thanks for the review.

I saw 300 three times in the theater. Loved it more with each viewing. I have the huge vinyl banner for the film hanging in my home theater.

I saw Troy twice at the cinema and enjoyed it enough to buy it. It gets better with additional viewings for me. I look forward to the extended version, too.

I have seen all three versions of Alexander and the final cut is stellar. It is the best version in terms of story and I love it.

To each his own, I say. I know I'm in the minority here with regard to these three films but I do not apologize for it. It does not bother me if someone thinks a movie sucks. It does bother me when the statement is not supported with examples or explanation. (The same is true for statements regarding how awesome a movie is, as pointed out by an earlier post.)

Thanks again for the review, Ken. Some of us appreciate your candor and honesty.
post #25 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
Originally Posted by TravisR
Exactly. If you came in and said something to the effect of "I didn't like this movie because of the non-stop narration that half the time was describing exactly what was happening on screen, the non-stop slow motion and faux tough guy talk that both became parodies of themselves and the terrible subplot about the wife put into the movie solely for the female demographic." is better than "tHsi mvoie sux!!!@@!!!!"

lol. Uh-oh
I was on the fence over whether to blind buy this (on HD)- because I didn't like Sin City much (mostly due to Millers faux tough guy/noir dialouge).
I was expecting the same here, but didn't realize this had redundant narration as well.
I just re-watched the trailer and it looks visually interesting, but that only carries me so far. Sounds like I'll just pony up for the rental after all.
post #26 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

I will be picking this one up.. I for one loved this movie.. can't wait! Thank you for the review.
post #27 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

This will be the movie that will push me over the HD DVD fence. I will purchase the 300 HD DVD and the Toshiba HD-A2.

THIS IS SPARTA!!!!!!!!!!
post #28 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

I saw this in theatre (in IMAX yet!) and loved it, but I think I'll pass for now. I already own The 300 Spartans which tells the story just as heroically, is brighter (therefore easier on the eyes) and stars people whose work I've liked and respected for years.

Don't get me wrong: as I said, I liked 300, but if the transfer isn't impeccable, I can pass. The only regret I have is that its existence probably guarantees that Gates Of Fire will never become a movie.

If my brother buys the two disc version, though, I will check out the fact vs. fiction extra and the midget archer outtake.
post #29 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

Quote:
The only regret I have is that its existence probably guarantees that Gates Of Fire will never become a movie.

Gates of Fire was so gripping, I doubt a movie could have ever done it justice. It'd take at least a 2 or 3 part miniseries to do it well.
post #30 of 51

Re: HTF REVIEW: 300: Two-Disc Special Edition

The movie has digital grain.
Warner's transfers can be bad.
Blood Diamond was NOT one of them.
Will post observations of both editions (HD COMBO) tomorrow.
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