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S E A R C H    D V D B e a v e r

Directed by Don Siegel
USA 1979

 

Screen legend Clint Eastwood (Coogan’s Bluff, Dirty Harry) and director Don Siegel (Two Mules for Sister Sara, The Beguiled) re-team for their fifth and final film in this fascinating account of the only three men ever to escape from the infamous maximum-security prison at Alcatraz. In 29 years, the seemingly impenetrable federal penitentiary, which housed Al Capone and “Birdman” Robert Stroud, was only broken once—by three men never heard of again. Eastwood portrays Frank Morris, the cunning bank robber who masterminded the elaborately detailed and, as far as anyone knows, ultimately successful, escape. Patrick McGoohan (Ice Station Zebra, TV’s The Prisoner) is a superb counterpoint as the suspicious warden. Filmed on location in Alcatraz, this gritty and realistic reenactment of a true story has all the power one expects of an Eastwood/Siegel movie. The stellar cast includes Fred Ward (Remo Williams), Roberts Blossom (Deranged), Jack Thibeau (Sudden Impact), Paul Benjamin (Across 110th Street) and Larry Hankin (Running Scared). Screenplay by Richard Tuggle (Tightrope), based on a book by J. Campbell Bruce.

***

San Francisco Bay, January 18th, 1960. Frank Lee Morris is transferred to Alcatraz, a maximum security prison located on a rocky island. Although no one has ever managed to escape from there, Frank and other inmates begin to carefully prepare an escape plan.

Posters

Theatrical Release: June 22nd, 1979

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Review: Kino - Region FREE - 4K UHD

Box Cover

CLICK to order from:

Bonus Captures:

Distribution Kino - Region FREE - 4K UHD
Runtime 1:51:53.540      
Video

1.78:1 2160P 4K Ultra HD

Disc Size: 84,073,716,393 bytes

Feature: 83,783,030,784 bytes

Video Bitrate: 69.99 Mbps

Codec: HEVC Video

NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes.

Bitrate 4K Ultra HD:

Audio

DTS-HD Master Audio English 3050 kbps 5.1 / 48 kHz / 3050 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 5.1 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)
DTS-HD Master Audio English 1985 kbps 2.0 / 48 kHz / 1985 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 2.0 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)
Commentary:

DTS-HD Master Audio English 1794 kbps 2.0 / 48 kHz / 1794 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 2.0 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)

Subtitles English (SDH), None
Features Release Information:
Studio:
Kino

 

1.78:1 2160P 4K Ultra HD

Disc Size: 84,073,716,393 bytes

Feature: 83,783,030,784 bytes

Video Bitrate: 69.99 Mbps

Codec: HEVC Video

 

Edition Details:

4K Ultra HD disc

• NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historians Steve Mitchell and Nathaniel Thompson

 

Kino - Region FREE - Blu-ray

• NEW Audio Commentary by Film Historians Steve Mitchell and Nathaniel Thompson
• THE GHOSTS OF ALCATRAZ: NEW Interview with Screenwriter Richard Tuggle (12:20)
• TALES FROM THE CELLBLOCK: NEW Interview with Actor Larry Hankin (14:16)
• Theatrical Trailer (Newly Remastered in 2K) (2:01)


4K Ultra HD Release Date:
November 8th, 2022
Black 4K Ultra HD Case inside slipcase

Chapters 11

 

 

Comments:

NOTE: The below Blu-ray and 4K UHD captures were taken directly from the respective discs.

ADDITION: Kino 4K UHD (November 2022): Kino's are releasing Don Siegel's "Escape from Alcatraz" 4K UHD. The package includes a second disc Blu-ray and both are advertised as being "From a 4K Scan of the Original Camera Negative." They are both in the 1.78:1 aspect ratio. The 4K UHD transfer has "HDR/Dolby Vision Master by Paramount Pictures." Unfortunately the 2160P image has DNR (Digital Noise Reduction) and is devoid of natural film grain. It's quite prominent and I have included two examples below. The visuals are frequently waxy and soft - losing detail. It's very unbecoming. Paramount continue to be the studio with the most flagrant examples of this, post 2020. If your system or senses do not show this as a deterrent, I actually found the included 1080P Blu-ray to look superior in many sequences although it too has limited-to-no grain textures. Colors appear fine - perhaps a shade of teal in the blue prison uniforms, but aside from the DNR, it would be a passable appearance. A shame.

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: 62 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: I, the Jury (no HDR), Casablanca (software uniformly simulated HDR), In the Mood For Love (NO HDR applied to disc), The Werewolf vs. the Vampire Woman  (software uniformly simulated HDR), Blow Out (software uniformly simulated HDR), Night of the Living Dead (NO HDR applied to disc), Lost Highway (software uniformly simulated HDR), Videodrome (software uniformly simulated HDR), The Last Picture Show (software uniformly simulated HDR), It Happened One Night (software uniformly simulated HDR), The Mummy (1932)(software uniformly simulated HDR), Creature From the Black Lagoon (software uniformly simulated HDR), Bride of Frankenstein (software uniformly simulated HDR), The Amityville Horror  (software uniformly simulated HDR), The War of the Worlds (1953) (software uniformly simulated HDR), The Incredible Melting Man  (software uniformly simulated HDR), 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, Kino offer the option of DTS-HD Master tracks (24-bit) in both 2.0 channel and 5.1 surround. There is a punctuating rifle shot warning, and is filled with various types of violence. The score is by Jerry Fielding (The Gambler, Farewell My Lovely, Straw Dogs, Scorpio, The Wild Bunch, Straw Dogs, The Killer Elite, The Mechanic, Kolchak: The Night Stalker and The Getaway) and sounds solid in the lossless. The disc offers optional English subtitles - and is, like all 4K UHD, region FREE, playable worldwide. The Blu-ray is region 'A'-locked.

The 4K UHD disc includes the new commentary by Steve Mitchell and Nathaniel Thompson. They talk about opening rainstorm scene, the cinematography of Bruce Surtees (Night Moves, Joe Kidd, Play Misty for Me), the style of the film - with a semi-documentary, pure storytelling expression, Siegel's connection to Alcatraz, seeing Clint's bare butt, how this was one of the fastest script-to-screen examples ever and much more about Eastwood, the director, cast and crew. Nathaniel reads quotes from sources related to the production.   

The second disc Blu-ray, has, the film in 1080P plus the new commentary described above. "The Ghosts of Alcatraz" is a new dozen-minute interview with screenwriter Richard Tuggle (his first screenplay credit.) "Tales From the Cellblock" is a new 1/4 hour interview with actor Larry Hankin reflecting on the production and his role as Charley Butts. Lastly, is a newly remastered trailer for "Escape from Alcatraz" as well as trailers for a handful of other Clint Eastwood films.  

Kino's
4K UHD release of Don Siegel's "Escape from Alcatraz" will be disappointing to discerning image-quality fans. The DNR is very unfortunate and marrs a potential film-like representation. I love the film - which is always rewatchable - that dramatizes the 1962 prisoner escape, as penned in J. Campbell Bruce 1963 non-fiction book, from the maximum security prison on Alcatraz Island. It was the fifth and final collaboration between Siegel and Eastwood. See if you can spot Danny Glover who appears in his film debut. Not until 1994's The Shawshank Redemption had another film eclipsed it as the best 'prison' escape movie ever made, if you don't include The Great Escape which is considered a 'Nazi POW camp' escape (by some.) Bottom line here: film is great - 4K UHD transfer is poor.   

Gary Tooze

 


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Flagrant examples of DNR
 
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