Milk [Blu-ray]
Blu-ray ALL - America - Universal Pictures
Review written by and copyright: Adam Palcher & Noor Razzak (13th April 2009).
The Film

The biopic of Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected into office, is full of inspiration, surprise and heart. Though Gus Van Sant’s past few experimental efforts "Elephant" (2003), "Last Days" (2005) and "Paranoid Park" (2007) have been some of the most painful experience put to celluloid, he is also the guy who made "Good Will Hunting" (1997). I understand Van Sant’s experimental side, but I cannot embrace it. He is a very hit or miss director, so it was an overwhelming surprise to have him come back to the mainstream and make a real movie, with real emotion.

The film is narrated by Harvey Milk himself, based from a recorded living will he made if he were ever to die by assassination. The story of "Milk" begins with Sean Penn playing the title character on his 40th birthday approaching Scott (James Franco) in a subway for sex. Being frustrated with his life they decide to move to San Francisco to a make something of himself. Milk becomes an avid civil rights leader, mainly focusing on gay rights, running for City Supervisor multiple times only to become the first openly gay man elected into office.

The story is what you would expect any biopic would be like, but you don’t come see this movie for the story. You see it for what the story represents, and the history that Harvey Milk made with nothing but a lot of heart and the willingness to stand up for what he believes in. The little man rises up in hard and threat filled times, organizing marches, gathering in city squares and having control of a government that would eventually kill him.

Penn is a true star in all forms of acting, so diverse, so passionate. He can play any role that is put in front of him and will probably get an Oscar nod for his portrayal as Harvey Milk. Along side him is a slue of young terrific actors that are sure to be legendary, if they choose the right roles. Emile Hirsch, and the always-fantastic Josh Brolin are two of my favorite actors out there today and almost never disappoint. Brolin’s portrayal as Dan White will make you wonder where he disappeared to for 15 years. Though James Franco is awful as Harry Osbourne in the "Spider-Man" film (2002-2007), he is dynamite as Harvey’s boyfriend Scott Smith, proving he can act opposite Penn and hold his own. The acting, twisted with an inspirational story, really makes this a perfect biopic.

Screenwriter Dustin Lance Black grew up Mormon and is openly gay (along with Van Sant), suffering through a conservative childhood he looked to activist Milk as a hero and way to open up to his homosexuality. Writing for the show “Big Love” (2006-Present) and other many various gigs, Black is a smart, witty screenwriter who understands content and what it takes to make an inspiring story. He writes what’s personal to him and hopes his voice gets heard, not only as a gay man, but a lover of storytelling, as well.

Video

Presented in the film's original theatrical ratio of 1.85:1 this widescreen image comes in high-definition 1080p 24/fps and is mastered in VC-1 compression. The film is made up of several different types of stocks, there's archival video and film footage, photographs and shot 35m footage. The balance is hard to match as we're constantly jumping between formats. The archival stuff looks exactly as expected and is flawed in almost every sense, the shot footage for the film looks brilliant, it's sharp and well blanched in terms of colors and contrast. Detail looks great as do textures, the image has real depth, grain is evident but adds to the film feel of the picture. On the surface it looks like a mixed bag transfer but this is intentional and overall this HD image is fairly solid.

Audio

A single English DTS-HD lossless Master Audio 5.1 surround track mixed in 48kHz/24-bit. The film's audio is quite active and this surround track presents it terrifically. Dialogue is clear and distortion free, subtle ambient sounds and environmental sounds are well placed throughout the 5.1 space. The film's score adds a further layer to the mix and makes it all the more immersive. Overall the track ranges from subdued to active with the crowd sequences as Harvey makes his speeches.
Optional subtitles are included in English for the hearing impaired, French and Spanish.

Extras

Universal has released this film with a collection of three featurettes and BD-Live access. Below is a closer look.

"Hollywood Comes to San Francisco" featurette is next, this is your run of the mill behind-the-scenes featurette about the making of the film. You get cast and crew interviews and on location mostly praising Van Sant. The featurette is well done and serves its purpose, the run time is 14 minutes 32 seconds.

"Remembering Harvey" is another featurette with interviews of Harvey’s real life colleagues and associates talking about Harvey himself and how he affected their lives. A nice and well-done featurette, giving a brief glimpse into Harvey’s life with a run time of 13 minutes 31 seconds. I’d suggested renting the documentary "The Times Of Harvey Milk" (1984) to get a fully realized documentary about the man himself.

"Marching for Equality" is a quick 7 minute 58 second featurette of the two staged demonstration scenes, showing the scale of something that big and the historical accuracy that needs to be represented, as well.

The disc also features BD-Live access for profile 2.0 players only and allows you connect to the Universal online portal. You can also bookmark your favorite scenes using the "MyScenes" feature.

The DVD release featured some deleted scenes, for some reason they were omitted from this release, why? Not sure, but it's a glaring omission... seriously what the hell Universal?

Overall

The Film: A- Video: A Audio: A+ Extras: C- Overall: B+

 


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