What's new

Blu-ray Review HTF BLU-RAY REVIEW: Wild Hogs (1 Viewer)

Matt Hough

Reviewer
Senior HTF Member
Joined
Apr 24, 2006
Messages
26,202
Location
Charlotte, NC
Real Name
Matt Hough
ronsreviews_covers_85517.jpg

Wild Hogs (Blu-ray)
Directed by Walt Becker

Studio: Touchstone
Year: 2007
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 1080p-AVC
Running Time: 100 minutes
Rating: PG-13
Audio: PCM 5.1 English, Dolby Digital 5.1 English, French, Spanish
Subtitles: SDH, French, Spanish
MSRP: $34.99

Release Date: August 14, 2007
Review Date: August 17, 2007



The Film

3/5

After receiving a fair amount of criticism over my lukewarm review of the standard definition edition of Wild Hogs, I relished another opportunity to visit the film, this time under potentially optimum video and sound conditions. Try as I might, I couldn’t find significant evidence of a better film present even with the sterling picture and sound. Thus, my comments on the film are reprinted (with a few minor tweaks) from the standard definition review.

Walt Becker’s Wild Hogs is a slender, predictable comedy with outstanding actors trying to make something funny out of basically trite material. That they often succeed in making it amusing is a testament to their gifts as comic actors, but real inventiveness, wit, and high comedy are not be to found here. This is the baggy-pants school of comedy on display where kicks-to-the-groin, pee and poop jokes, and slapstick shenanigans (dousing a fire with gasoline) are the order of the day. Silly and slight, the film was an enormous box-office hit this past spring. Big name stars in familiar Disney comedyland promised and delivered a genuine crowd pleaser.

Screenwriter Brad Copeland has fashioned four one-note characters: workaholic dentist Doug (Tim Allen), showy investor Woody (John Travolta), henpecked husband/plumber Bobby (Martin Lawrence), and nerdy, girl shy computer programmer Dudley (William H. Macy). Right off the bat one must buy that these four guys from different strata of society and with such glaringly incompatible personalities would be palling around together on motorcycles. (A more interesting story might have been how the four met and became such good friends.) Each in the midst of a debilitating mid-life crisis, they decide to take a road trip together from Ohio to California on their motorcycles. The film details their adventures on the road, everything from unwanted attention from a gay motorcycle cop (John C. McGinley) to alienating a bullying biker gang by inadvertently burning down their bar and destroying some of their rides.

Eventually they land in Madrid, New Mexico, where each man must confront his own fears and weaknesses. A lovely bar owner Maggie (Marisa Tomei) falls for Macy (really?), and the bikers, who have terrorized the town before, arrive to seek vengeance on our four heroes. Their leader Jack (Ray Liotta) is especially anxious to reap payback for the destruction of the bar (it belonged to his family as we later learn) and to save face in front of his gang after being outsmarted earlier.

Copeland hasn’t really come up with much that’s fresh in terms of plot (and he’s written for two of the best sitcoms of the past five years – Arrested Development and My Name Is Earl), and the gags are so predictable one can see them coming with little effort. There are some good stunts that evoke some genuine laughs and one buzzard that’s hysterical, the film’s best sight gag. But I kept hoping for something more for these talented people to do. In addition to the named cast above, the movie also has Jill Hennesy, Tichina Arnold, Stephan Tobolowsky, and several surprise cameo appearances of familiar faces from previous biker films, cable and network television. They all provide momentarily welcome relief from the commonplace script and the unimaginative direction by Becker.

None of the four male stars is stretching his comic muscles to any extent, but Allen has a good comic moment at the dinner table that serves as the impetus for him to join the odyssey, and Lawrence plays a henpecked husband very convincingly. Macy’s milquetoast nerd is a bit much especially after we’ve seen him do that already to a fare-thee-well in Fargo. All four handle their bikes with ease clearly doing much of the riding we see on the screen. As for Ray Liotta, on paper his casting was a smart idea, and he’s playing it as mean and rotten as he can, but it’s never threatening (despite the tattoos, he‘s too well groomed). Now, the Ray Liotta from Something Wild, that Ray Liotta had me squirming in my theater seat!

Wild Hogs is a feather-light comedy with famous faces doing the expected. If that’s what you’re in the mood for, this movie is an innocuously pleasant way to spend an evening.


Video Quality

4.5/5

Robbie Greenberg’s Panavision photography has been well captured in the 2.35:1 1080p transfer (using the AVC CODEC).. The film is in pristine condition with rich, vibrant color, superb fleshtones, and a very sharp picture. There is some minor edge enhancement, but it‘s not obtrusive. Blacks are solid, and shadow detail is nicely rendered. The film has been divided into 15 chapters.

Audio Quality

4.5/5

The uncompressed PCM 5.1 track is glorious, a very impressive step up from the Dolby Digital 5.1 track on the SD-DVD and which is also offered on this disc. The soundfield is surprisingly expansive, and the design of the revving motorcycle engines pans front to back and side to side constantly also engaging terrific low end in all channels. The only slight disappointment is in the film’s big explosion sequence which is much less impressive than I was expecting.

Special Features

3.5/5

Director Walt Becker and screenwriter Brad Copeland provide an audio commentary which is overly generous with praise for all involved with the production. However, they do each give some good behind-the-scenes information on the filming of the movie, and after a slow start, they seem to get in the groove and talk consistently throughout the running time of the film.

“Bikes, Brawls, and Burning Bars: The Making of Wild Hogs” is a 16-minute featurette containing interviews with several key personnel both before and behind the camera. The documentary covers the three major set pieces in the movie: the bull ring scene, the climactic brawl, and the spectacular bar explosion. Presented in high definition (VC-1) with generous use of clips from the film, the feature does end very abruptly.

“How to Get Your Wife to Let You Buy a Motorcycle” is a 3-minute throwaway feature offering suggestions on the male side of a potential family dispute about purchasing a motorcycle. It’s presented in 1.78:1 high definition (VC-1).

The disc offers up three deleted scenes, two of which can have accompanying commentary or not. One is an alternate ending (which I would have preferred) and two others added virtually nothing to the film and were wisely omitted. These are all presented in high definition (VC-1)

There’s approximately 2½ minutes of outtakes and bloopers also presented in anamorphic widescreen (VC-1).

There is the usual Movie Showcase feature which selects three scenes (road antics, the bar explosion, the bull ring) that are considered reference quality for selection.

A selection of four very nice looking high definition trailers are offered at the top of the disc: The Invisible, Ratatouille, Meet the Robinsons, and Invincible.


In Conclusion

3/5 (not an average)

Despite being a crowd pleasing movie, Wild Hogs isn’t going to be on anyone’s list of the year’s most scintillating comedies, but it’s mildly pleasurable if completely predictable. Stay tuned to the end credits, however, which contain one of the best comic sequences in the film, a witty application of one of TV’s most bathos-filled series to the circumstances in the movie.



Matt Hough
Charlotte, NC
 

Jordan_E

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Jan 3, 2002
Messages
2,233
The only part that actually had me laughing outloud was the end credits sequence. But, surprisingly, the wife thought this movie was hilarious. Go figure.
 

Paul Hillenbrand

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Aug 16, 1998
Messages
2,043
Real Name
Paul Hillenbrand
Agreed. Television previews made it enticing, but I'm regretting the purchase.:thumbsdown:

Paul
 

Ron Reda

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Jul 27, 2001
Messages
2,276
Sounds like a rental to me, but I'll check it out. Sometimes you need to watch a "d*ck and fart joke" movie.
 

Ron-P

Senior HTF Member
Joined
Jul 25, 2000
Messages
6,300
Real Name
Ron
Great cast, poor excuse for a comedy. Saw it in the theater and wish I never did.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Sign up for our newsletter

and receive essential news, curated deals, and much more







You will only receive emails from us. We will never sell or distribute your email address to third party companies at any time.

Latest Articles

Members online

Forum statistics

Threads
357,078
Messages
5,130,270
Members
144,283
Latest member
mycuu
Recent bookmarks
1
Top