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DISNEY

MOVIE INFO

Director:
Brian Fee
Cast:
Owen Wilson, Larry the Cable Guy, Cristela Alonzo, Chris Cooper
Writing Credits:
Kiel Murray, Ben Peterson, Mike Rich

Synopsis:
Lightning McQueen sets out to prove to a new generation of racers that he's still the best race car in the world.

Box Office:
Budget
$175 million.
Opening Weekend
$53,688,680 on 4256 screens.
Domestic Gross
$152,895,516.

MPAA:
Rated G

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1
Audio:
English DTS-HD MA 7.1
English DTS-HD MA 5.1
English Descriptive Video 2.0
English Dolby 2.0
Catalan Dolby 5.1
Spanish Dolby 5.1
Thai Dolby 5.1
Polish Dolby 5.1
Subtitles:
English
Spanish
Polish
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
French
Spanish

Runtime: 103 min.
Price: $19.99
Release Date: 11/7/2017

Bonus:
&bull. Both 2D and 3D Versions
• Audio Commentary with Director Brian Fee, Producer Kevin Reher, Co-Producer Andrea Warren, and Creative Director Jay Ward
• “Lou” Short
• “Miss Fritter’s Racing Skoool” Short
• “Ready for the Race” Featurette
• “The Yellow Car That Could” Featurette
• “Generations” Featurette
• “Lets. Get. Crazy.” Featurette
• “Cars to Die(cast) For” Featurette
• “Legendary” Featurette
• “World’s Fastest Billboard” Featurette
• “Fly-Throughs”
• “My First Car” Featurettes
• Deleted Scenes
• Trailers
• Promos
• Sneak Peeks
• DVD Copy


PURCHASE @ AMAZON.COM

EQUIPMENT
-LG OLED65C6P 65-Inch 4K Ultra HD Smart OLED TV
-Marantz SR7010 9.2 Channel Full 4K Ultra HD AV Surround Receiver
-Panasonic DMP-BD60K Blu-Ray Player
-Chane A2.4 Speakers
-SVS SB12-NSD 12" 400-watt Sealed Box Subwoofer


RELATED REVIEWS


Cars 3 [Blu-Ray 3D] (2017)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (April 29, 2020)

Seven years after 2010’s Toy Story 3, 2017’s Cars 3 becomes the second Pixar franchise to reach a third chapter. Whereas 2011’s Cars 2 delivered a wild secret agent tale, Cars 3 hews closer to the vibe of the original 2006 film.

This means that Cars 3 shies away from Cars 2’s focus on second banana Mater (voiced by Larry the Cable Guy) and re-concentrates on race driver Lightning McQueen (Owen Wilson). Years after he became a champion, Lightning starts to feel his age.

This occurs because Lightning shows vulnerability to younger, faster models like main challenger Jackson Storm (Armie Hammer). To regain his winning ways, Lightning works with trainer Cruz Martinez (Cristela Alonzo) – and he deals with his own self-worth and mortality along the way.

In most ways, Cars 2 disappointed. I thought the film offered decent entertainment, but it lacked the heart and creativity we expect from Pixar.

That said, I’ll give Cars 2 this: at least it didn’t just remake the first film. Rather than rehash the same notions and themes, Cars 2 went down new paths – not always effective new paths, but I respected its desire to forge its own way.

I can’t make the same claims for Cars 3. Does it literally retell the original? No, but it feels closer to “remake” than I’d prefer, as it reworks a lot of the same concepts from its predecessor.

When I’ve watched Disney sequels over the years, I’ve noticed how many “reversed” the plots of their predecessors. For instance, in Pocahontas, English settlers come to America and deal with natives. In Pocahontas II, natives go to England and deal with the locals.

No, the sequel didn’t offer a literal “reverse remake” of the original, but I think it took a convenient path. It essentially just flipped the events of the first film, and to a degree, that’s what Cars 3 does.

In the original, Lightning learned how to race from a mentor, whereas in Cars 3, he becomes the mentor. Granted, the two narratives take different paths, but I still feel like Cars 3 offers a pretty self-conscious reflection of the first film.

Unfortunately, it’s not an especially lively reworking of the material. While Cars 3 works better than Cars 2, it still lacks much real spirit or reason to exist.

From what I’ve read, the Cars franchise makes more money via toys and other merchandise than through the movies themselves. Do I think Pixar continues to produce new films just to keep that related cash flow in effect?

No, I’m not quite that cynical, but I can’t help but wonder, especially since Cars 2 underperformed at the box office. Because it didn’t excel financially, the existence of Cars 3 makes less sense.

Given that Cars 3 fared even worse in terms of ticket sales, a Cars 4 will confirm my potential cynicism. With the series’ theatrical finances in decline, only toy sales seem likely to redeem it.

If we never get another Cars movie, I’ll shed no tears, as Cars 3 just doesn’t add much to the franchise. Granted, this film offers easily the strongest visuals of the bunch, as the computer animation really excels. I can’t criticize the movie’s production values.

As usual, we get a good cast here. When possible, most of the original actors return – Michael Keaton is a no-show as Chick Hicks, but that character plays a small role, so his absence disappoints but doesn’t harm the movie. The others offer quality work.

Despite the talent involved, though, Cars 3 just lacks much real purpose or drive. When Toy Story 3 emerged, it managed to give us something new and fresh with the characters, but Cars 3 fails to find a clear arc of its own.

Which comes back to my prior point that Cars 3 tends to come across as a semi-remake of the first movie. None of this makes it bad, as Cars 3 still manages reasonable entertainment across its 106 minutes – it just feels stuck in neutral too much of the time.

Footnote: stick around through the end credits for a little bonus with Mater.


The Disc Grades: Picture A/ Audio A-/ Bonus B

Cars 3 appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.39:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. As expected, the movie came with a terrific visual presentation.

At all times, sharpness excelled. The film offered tight, concise imagery without a hint of softness along the way.

I saw no signs of jagged edges or shimmer, and edge haloes also failed to appear. In addition, source flaws never created distractions.

Colors offered peppy material, as the movie’s bright, varied palette came across with punch. Blacks seemed deep and dense, while shadows were smooth and clear. This turned into a top-notch image.

In addition, the movie’s DTS-HD MA 7.1 soundtrack added pizzazz to the proceedings. As expected, the racing scenes offered the greatest sense of activity and involvement, as those used the vehicles to swarm and move around the room in an engulfing manner.

Other scenes created a good sense of the story as well. Most of the sequences focused on environmental information, but they still worked well and delivered a nice experience.

Audio quality succeeded as well, with natural, concise dialogue. Music seemed full and rich, while effects appeared accurate and distinctive, with nice low-end response. The soundtrack suited the film and added excitement.

This package includes both 2D and 3D versions of Cars 3. The picture comments above reflected the 2D edition – how did the 3D compare?

In terms of visual quality, the two felt similar. Though I thought the 3D version took a small hit in terms of sharpness on a few occasions, those seemed miniscule and didn’t create a distraction.

As for the stereo imaging, Cars 3 mainly favored depth, and that opened up matters to a decent degree. Unsurprisingly, race scenes fared best, though those that took place on tracks didn’t become especially impressive.

Instead, the film’s off-road sequences worked best, as they used the natural surroundings for some moderately exciting visual information. However, the movie lacked any real pop-out shots and came with a fairly restrained 3D impression.

Did it do enough to turn into my preferred version of the film? Yeah, but not by much of a margin. The 3D Cars 3 became a little more fun than the 2D, but don’t expect a thrilling presentation.

As we shift to extras, we open with an audio commentary from director Brian Fee, producer Kevin Reher, co-producer Andrea Warren, and creative director Jay Ward. All four sit together for this running, screen-specific look at story/characters, cast and performances, design and animation, research, hidden elements, music, editing, and connected domains.

Pixar commentaries usually work well, and this one continues that trend. It provides a rich, introspective look at the film that offers a nice range of insights.

A short that ran ahead of Cars 3 theatrically, Lou goes for six minutes, 43 seconds. It shows how the contents of a school’s lost and found come to life and teach a bully a lesson.

Lou breaks no new ground but it offers charm and sentiment. Note that it comes in a 3D incarnation on that disc as well.

A new “mini-movie” called Miss Fritter’s Racing Skoool goes for two minutes, 48 seconds. It shows a TV commercial for the titular “skoool” and offers mild entertainment – though they couldn’t get Owen Wilson to come back for the 15 seconds of recording time to reprise his role as Lightning, so we get a soundalike.

2D Disc One shows two featurettes. Ready for the Race fills five minutes, 40 seconds and shows some of the real-life driving that inspired the film. It seems pretty fluffy.

With The Yellow Car That Could, we locate a seven-minute, 46-second piece with notes from Fee, story artist Louise Smythe, story supervisor Scott Morse, writers Kiel Murray and Bob Peterson, directing animator Jude Brownbill, and actor Cristela Alonzo.

They look at the design and execution of the Cruz character. Though this becomes a little self-congratulatory, it still provides a nice array of notes.

2D Disc One opens with ads for Coco and Olaf’s Frozen Adventure. Sneak Peeks adds promos for Descendants 2, and Disneynature: Dolphins.

Now we head to 2D Disc Two, where we launch with five featurettes under “Behind the Scenes”. Generations: The Story of Cars 3 runs 11 minutes, 20 seconds and includes Fee, Morse, Reher, Smythe, Ward, Warren, writers Bob Peterson and Kiel Murray, and editor Jason Hudak,

“Generations” digs into sequel-related challenges as well as a variety of story and character areas. Despite its brevity, “Generations” proves to be unusually tight and introspective.

Next comes Let’s. Get. Crazy. It goes for seven minutes, 41 seconds and features Fee, Warren, Morse, production designer Bill Cone, director of photography Jeremy Laskey, layout artist Mike Leonard, racer Earl Cox Jr., crowds animation supervisor Becki Rocha Tower, directing animator Royce Wesley, effects artist Michael Hall, and actor Lea DeLaria.

“Crazy” examines the movie’s demolition derby sequence. It’s more hyperbole-filled than “Generations”, but it still delivers a decent mix of notes.

During the five-minute, 21-second Cars to Die(cast) For, we hear from Fee, Ward, production designer Jay Shuster, consumer products manager Mandy Freund, consumer products creative director Jen Tan, creative art director Bob Pauley, “Take 5 a Day” website founder Ken Chang, assistant production accountant Emily Engie, simulation lead Jacob Brooks, and consumer products designer Christopher Meeker.

We get a look at the Cars series of die-cast toys here. Some of this feels like an advertisement, but the show offers enough personalized insights to merit a look.

Legendary fills 11 minutes, 22 seconds with notes from Fee, Morse, Ward, Washington, Murray, Shuster, motor sports journalist Deb Williams, NASCAR historians Ken Martin and Buz McKim, Wendell Scott Foundation CEO Warrick Scott, NASCAR driver Louise Smith, and actors Isiah Whitlock Jr. and Margo Martindale.

“Legendary” looks at the roots of NASCAR and its influence on the movie. The show delivers a fair collection of basics.

“Behind the Scenes” finishes with World’s Fastest Billboard. The five-minute, 30-second piece brings comments from Fee, Ward, Cone, Shuster, Foster, graphic designers Paul Conrad, Josh Holtsclaw and Laura Meyer, and motion graphics designer Catherine Kelly.

Here we see examples of the “car-ified” designs for the movie. Essentially it gives us Easter eggs we might otherwise miss, so it’s a fun reel.

Under Fly-Throughs, we get three clips: “Thomasville” (1:10). “Florida International Speedway” (0:37), and “Rust-Eze Racing Center” (0:56). They give us views of various locations and provide mildly interesting footage.

Three more snippets appear under My First Car: “A Green Car On the Red Carpet” (1:53), “Old Blue” (1:21) and “Still in the Family” (2:16). In these, we hear from actor Kerry Washington, graphic designer Craig Foster, and technical resident Valeria Barra, respectively.

As expected, each one discusses his/her first car. They offer some gently engaging memories.

Five Deleted Scenes fill a total of 26 minutes, 17 seconds. That time includes a 55-second introduction from Fee, and the director also offers lead-ins to each individual scene. He offers good insights about the material.

As for the scenes themselves, they offer a mix of discarded storylines. As Fee explains, a lot of these fell victim to changes in narrative/character choices and wouldn’t fit the film as it developed. Still, they’re enjoyable to see.

Within Trailers, we get five promos: two North American, one Japanese, one “international”, and one “global”. Since it’s in German, I’m not sure why the last one is called “global” – maybe someone meant “German” and autocorrect called it “global”.

In addition, Promos breaks into two areas. “Cars D’oeuvres” runs four minutes, 27 seconds and offers a slew of brief movie character interstitials. I don’t know where these appeared – Disney Channel? - but they’re moderately fun.

“Car Reveals” splits into three characters, each of which shows glimpses of the vehicles involved. They’re not especially interesting, but in terms of completism, I’m glad they’re here.

As the franchise’s third entry, Cars 3 feels a bit flat and without real purpose. While it still keeps us moderately entertained, the film simply lacks great wit or spirit. The Blu-ray boasts excellent visuals and audio along with a pretty good roster of supplements. Cars 3 becomes decent but lackluster animated fare, one that gets a little extra kick in its 3D incarnation

To rate this film, visit the original review of CARS 3