MaXXXine appears in an aspect ratio of 2.39:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. Despite a mix of stylistic choices that impacted the visuals, this usually became a solid image.
Given some blown-out shots, sharpness occasionally felt a bit fuzzy. However, those instances occurred due to photographic choices, and the majority of the flick came across as well-defined.
No issues with jagged edges or moiré effects arose, and I saw no edge haloes. Outside of fake “print flaws” that accompanied flashbacks, the movie lacked source defects.
Despite the film’s 1985 setting, the colors usually opted toward modern teal and amber, along with some heavy reds. The disc reproduced the hues as intended.
Blacks seemed deep and dense, while shadows offered good clarity. Again, the nature of the cinematography meant some visual inconsistencies, but the movie usually looked solid.
Downconverted to Dolby TrueHD 7.1, the movie’s Dolby Atmos soundtrack seemed suitable for the story. That said, one shouldn’t expect fireworks from it.
Much of the mix concentrated on general ambience. The track kicked to life a bit more during some of the violent scenes, but the audio largely preferred moody atmosphere and music.
Audio quality worked fine, with speech that came across as natural and concise. Music showed nice vivacity and range.
Effects boasted appealing accuracy, and when necessary, they packed a nice punch. Nothing here dazzled but the mix worked fine for the material.
How did this 2025 reissue of MaXXXIne compare to the original 2024 Blu-ray? Visuals and audio seemed identical for both. If the 2025 release improved the 2024 disc’s presentation in any way, I didn’t detect it.
The 2025 edition does provide a few new extras, and one of these comes from an audio commentary from set decorator Kelsi Ephraim and production designer Jason Kisvarday. Both sit together for this running, screen-specific look at their work on the film as well as some other production details.
Though they do spread the love, Ephraim and Kisvarday really do concentrate on their side of the flick. That sounds limiting but they dig into their efforts with such detail that this turns into a really good look at the ins and outs of their jobs.
The disc comes with a few video extras, and we open with The Belly of the Beast. It goes for nine minutes, 38 seconds and delivers info from producer Jacob Jaffke and actors Mia Goth, Kevin Bacon, Elizabeth Debicki, Halsey, Giancarlo Esposito, Lily Collins, Moses Sumney and Michelle Monaghan.
“Belly” discusses the “X Trilogy”, cast and performances, and the work of writer/director Ti West. Expect a lot of happy talk and not much substance.
XXX Marks the Spot lasts 11 minutes, 19 seconds. It comes with notes from Goth, Bacon, Debicki, Monaghan, Jaffke, Kisvarday, and director of photography Eliot Rockett.
With “Spot”, we look at cinematic influences, attempts to reflect the 1980s setting, sets and locations. A few useful notes emerge, but much of “Spot” focuses on self-praise.
Next comes Hollywood Is a Killer. It spans eight minutes, 13 seconds and features Bacon, Monaghan, makeup designer Sarah Rubano, key prosthetics makeup artist Kevin Wagner, and SFX makeup designer Justin Raleigh.
Here we get thoughts about makeup and effects. We get a pretty informative overview from this brief program.
After this we locate a Q&A with Writer/Director Ti West. Shot after a screening at Alamo Drafthouse, moderator Jen Yamato chats with West over this 25-minute, 45-second reel.
West looks at the development of the X trilogy, story/characters, music and period details, cast and performances, influences and inspirations, and connected topics. West touches on the film well and makes me wish he'd recorded a commentary.
Along with two trailers, we wrap with Deep Dive with Composer Tyler Bates. Not found on the prior Blu-ray, it occupies eight minutes, 26 seconds.
Bates discusses his relationship with West and his work on the X films. Bates provides useful details.
New to this “X Trilogy” set, we get a 64-page booklet that includes an essay from critic Jon Dieringer along with photos, art/sketches and movie ephemera across X and sequels Pearl and MaXXXine. It offers some value to the package.
Ti West’s “X Trilogy” ends on a sub-mediocre note with MaXXXine. Given I didn’t think much of the first two movies in the series, this doesn’t come as a major disappointment or surprise, but I nonetheless can’t find much in this meandering 1980s callback to endorse. The Blu-ray comes with largely positive picture and audio as well as a mix of supplements. Ti West boasts talent but he doesn’t exhibit those skills with the forgettable MaXXXine.
Note that this 2025 Blu-ray of MaXXXine comes only as part of a three-film “X Trilogy” set. This includes updated versions of prior films X and Pearl as well as the aforementioned 64-page booklet.