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S E A R C H D V D B e a v e r |
Directed by Richard Franklin
USA 1984
Young computer wizard Davey (Henry Thomas) copes with his mother's death and the lack of attention he gets from his father (Dabney Coleman) by immersing himself in the world of his favorite video game and his imaginary friend, secret agent Jack Flack (also played by Coleman). When the boy gets mixed up in a real-life spy plot, his devotion to make-believe causes adults to doubt him... leaving Davey to face the danger all by himself! ***
Davey Osborne is an average 11-year-old boy with an overactive imagination. He
spends his days playing video games and pretending to be a spy with his
imaginary father-figure, Jack Flack - a substitute for his real father, who is
struggling with the recent death of Davey's mother. However, fantasy becomes
reality for Davey after he witnesses the murder of an FBI agent, who in his
dying breath, gives Davey a mysterious video game cartridge called Cloak &
Dagger, which in actuality contains top-secret government information. With the
help of his younger friend Kim, the tech savvy Morris, and even a little help
from his fictional secret agent mentor, Davey must stay one step ahead of
pursuers as he tries to survive a real-life game of espionage in the streets of
San Antonio, Texas. *** 11-year-old Davey's mother is dead and his father doesn't spend nearly enough time with him. So the boy loses himself in video games--and even has an imaginary friend, a super-resourceful secret agent. When he accidentally comes into possession of a spy group's secret plans, and winds up on the run from them, he must learn to rely on himself and his imaginary pal to save his skin. But, in the end, Dad proves to be his real hero. |
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Theatrical Release: July 13th, 1984
Reviews More Reviews DVD Reviews
Review: Vinegar Syndrome - Region FREE - 4K UHD
Box Cover |
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CLICK to order from: Bonus Captures: |
Distribution | Vinegar Syndrome - Region FREE - 4K UHD | |
Runtime | 1:41:26.246 | |
Video |
1.85:1 2160P 4K Ultra HD Disc Size: 65,700,738,007 bytesFeature: 65,434,277,760 bytes Video Bitrate: 78.58 MbpsCodec: HEVC Video |
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NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. |
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Bitrate 4K Ultra HD: |
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Audio |
DTS-HD Master
Audio English 2110 kbps 2.0 / 48 kHz / 2110 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 2.0 /
48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit) Dolby Digital Audio English 320 kbps 2.0 / 48 kHz / 320 kbps / DN -27dB |
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Subtitles | English (SDH), None | |
Features |
Release Information: Studio: Vinegar Syndrome
1.85:1 2160P 4K Ultra HD Disc Size: 65,700,738,007 bytesFeature: 65,434,277,760 bytes Video Bitrate: 78.58 MbpsCodec: HEVC Video
Edition Details: 4K Ultra HD disc Commentary track with screenwriter Tom Holland, moderated by filmmaker Joe Lynch
Vinegar Syndrome - Region 'A' - Blu-ray
Commentary track with screenwriter Tom Holland, moderated by filmmaker
Joe Lynch
Black 4K Ultra HD Case Chapters 6 |
Comments: |
NOTE:
The below
Blu-ray
and
4K UHD
captures were taken directly from the respective
discs.
It is likely that the monitor you are seeing this review is not an HDR-compatible display (High Dynamic Range) or Dolby Vision, where each pixel can be assigned with a wider and notably granular range of color and light. Our capture software if simulating the HDR (in a uniform manner) for standard monitors. This should make it easier for us to review more 4K UHD titles in the future and give you a decent idea of its attributes on your system. So our captures may not support the exact same colors (coolness of skin tones, brighter or darker hues etc.) as the 4K system at your home. But the framing, detail, grain texture support etc. are, generally, not effected by this simulation representation. NOTE: 46 more more full resolution (3840 X 2160) 4K UHD captures, in lossless PNG format, for Patrons are available HERE
We have reviewed the following 4K
UHD packages to date:
Event Horizon
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Get Carter
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Killing
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Killer's Kiss
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Out of Sight
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Raging Bull
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Shaft
(1971),
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Double Indemnity
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Untouchables
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
For a Few Dollars More
(no HDR),
Saboteur
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Marnie
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Shadow of a Doubt
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
A Fistful of Dollars
(no HDR),
In the Heat of the Night
(no HDR),
Jack Reacher
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Death Wish II
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Apartment
(no HDR),
The Proposition
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Nightmare Alley (2021)
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Godfather
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Le Crecle Rouge
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
An American Werewolf in London
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
A Hard Day's Night
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Piano
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Great Escape
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Red Shoes
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Citizen Kane
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Unbreakable
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Mulholland Dr.
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Invasion of the Body Snatchers
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Hills Have Eyes
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Servant
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Anatomy of a Murder
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Taxi
Driver
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Wolf Man (1941)
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Frankenstein (1931)
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Deep Red
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Misery
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Silence of the Lambs
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
John Carpenter's "The Thing"
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Cat' o'Nine Tails
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Bird With the Crystal Plumage
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Perdita Durango
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Django
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Fanny Lye Deliver'd (software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly,
(NO HDR applied to disc),
Rollerball
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Chernobyl
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Daughters of Darkness
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Vigilante
(software uniformly simulated HDR), Tremors
(software uniformly simulated HDR), Cinema Paradiso
(software uniformly simulated HDR), The Bourne Legacy
(software uniformly simulated HDR), Full Metal Jacket
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Psycho
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Birds (software uniformly simulated HDR),
Rear Window (software uniformly simulated HDR),
Vertigo
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Spartacus
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Jaws
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Invisible Man,
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Steven Spielberg's
War of the Worlds (software uniformly simulated HDR),
Lucio Fulci's 1979
Zombie
(software uniformly simulated HDR),,
2004's
Van Helsing
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Shallows
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Bridge on the River Kwai
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Deer Hunter
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Elephant Man
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
A Quiet Place
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Easy Rider
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Suspiria
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Pan's Labyrinth
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Wizard of Oz, (software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Shining,
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Batman Returns
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Don't Look Now
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Man Who Killed Killed and then The Bigfoot
(software uniformly simulated HDR),,
Bram Stoker's Dracula
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Lucy
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
They Live
(software uniformly simulated HDR), Shutter Island
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
The Matrix
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Alien
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
Toy Story
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
A Few Good Men
(software uniformly simulated HDR),
2001: A Space Odyssey (HDR caps udated),
Schindler's List
(simulated HDR), The
Neon Demon (No HDR), Dawn
of the Dead (No HDR), Saving
Private Ryan (simulated HDR and 'raw' captures), Suspiria (No
HDR), The
Texas Chain Saw Massacre (No HDR), The
Big Lebowski, and I
Am Legend (simulated and 'raw' HDR captures).
On their
4K UHD,
Vinegar Syndrome use a DTS-HD Master stereo track (24-bit) in the
original English language.
"Cloak & Dagger" is filled with
aggressive effects - gunfire often with silencers - a car chase, plane
explosion - all
coming through with impact. The
score is by
Brian May who composed for
Richard Franklin's
Road Games
and other
Ozploitation
films like
Snapshot,
The
Survivor, Turkey
Shoot, and
Nightmares sounding
solid supporting the film in
subtle ways. Vinegar Syndrome include
optional English (SDH) subtitles - and is, like all
4K UHD, region FREE,
playable worldwide. In this case the second disc
Blu-ray
is region 'A'-locked.
The
4K UHD and
Blu-ray
have
a commentary track with screenwriter Tom Holland,
moderated by filmmaker Joe Lynch. They discuss the difference between
'screen story' and 'screenplay', nods to the source material, coy Easter
eggs in the film like Henry Thomas in front of a video game of
E.T., Holland talks about William Forsythe gaining weight for his
role, a rift between Dabney Coleman and Richard Franklin, "Davey" being
named after the director's son and much more. I would recommend indulging -
a good commentary.
On the
Blu-ray: "Konami
Codes and Cult Classics: Programming CLOAK & DAGGER" is a new 1/2 hour
making-of documentary featuring interviews with: Tom Holland (screenwriter),
Michael Murphy (actor), Jackie Burch (casting director), Todd Hallowell (art
director), Alan Curtiss (second assistant director), Tammy Hyler (actress.)
"Loud and Clear" is a new 1/4 hour interview with actor Henry Thomas
who recalls the production. There is also both a short archival interview
with director Richard Franklin and a Q&A with the director from 2001.
Vinegar Syndrome include an extensive behind-the-scenes still gallery, a
short "Locations featurette" and a 1/2 hour documentary focused on
the Atari game entitled "Cloak & Dagger - The Atari Arcade Game.
Lastly, are a couple of TV spots and the reversible cover artwork package
has a 40-page perfect bound book featuring an interview with screenwriter
Tom Holland and an essay by Justin LaLiberty.
Richard Franklin's Cloak & Dagger is 80's, father and son, nostalgia
gold. It is a spy adventure based on a Cornell Woolrich short story, "The
Boy Cried Murder". It had previously been filmed as Ted Tetzlaff's 1949
The Window with Bobby Driscoll in Henry Thomas' more modern role and
in 1970's
Sudden Terror with Mark Lester. Davey's world exists between the
fiction of his Atari video game and imaginary representation of his father
as heroic 'Jack Flack' and the stark reality of spies and stolen military
secrets that he has stumbled into. Franklin has more echoes of Hitchcock -
which is common for him. Cloak & Dagger is quite fun and
memorable and
Vinegar Syndrome's
4K UHD
release offers plenty with superb a/v, a commentary and more
supplements. Absolutely recommended. |
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Menus / Extras
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CLICK EACH BLU-RAY and 4K UHD CAPTURE TO SEE IN FULL RESOLUTION
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More full resolution (3840 X 2160) 4K Ultra HD Captures for Patreon Supporters HERE
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Box Cover |
|
CLICK to order from: Bonus Captures: |
Distribution | Vinegar Syndrome - Region FREE - 4K UHD |
Search DVDBeaver |
S E A R C H D V D B e a v e r |