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UNIVERSAL

MOVIE INFO

Director:
Stephen Sommers
Cast:
Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, Dwayne Johnson
Writing Credits:
Stephen Sommers Synopsis:
The mummified body of Imhotep is shipped to a museum in London, where he once again wakes and begins his campaign of rage and terror.

Box Office:
Budget
$98 million.
Opening Weekend
$68,139,035 on 3,401 Screens.
Domestic Gross
$202,007,640.

MPAA:
Rated PG-13.

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Audio:
English DTS X
English DTS Headphone X
French DTS 5.1
Spanish DTS 5.1
Subtitles:
English
French
Spanish
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
Spanish
French

Runtime: 130 min.
Price: $22.98
Release Date: 9/12/2017

Bonus:
• Audio Commentary with Director/Writer/Producer Stephen Sommers and Producer/Editor Bob Ducsay
• U-Control Interactive Feature
• Outtakes
The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor Sneak Peek
• “An Army to Rule the World – Part 2” Featurette
• “Unraveling the Legacy of The Mummy” Featurette
• “Visual and Special Effects Formation” Featurette
• “An Exclusive Conversation with The Rock” Featurette
• “Spotlight on Location” Featurette
• Storyboard to Final Film Comparison
• Music Video
• Blu-ray 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
-Sony UBP-X700 4K Ultra HD Dolby Vision Blu-ray Player
-Chane A2.4 Speakers
-SVS SB12-NSD 12" 400-watt Sealed Box Subwoofer


RELATED REVIEWS


The Mummy Returns [4K UHD] (2001)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (April 6, 2021)

As my fourth review of 2001’s The Mummy Returns, I think I’ve regurgitated my original discussion enough. If you’d like to check out my full comments, please click here.

To summarize, Returns provides an above-average adventure, as it’s a good summer flick. It simply isn’t anything particularly memorable or exceptional.


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

The Mummy Returns appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.35:1 on this 4K UHD Disc. Though usually very good, some concerns kept the presentation from greatness.

Sharpness was pretty crisp and detailed through the entire movie. A few shots looked slightly soft, but the image remained well-defined and accurate the vast majority of the time.

I witnessed no examples of moiré effects or jagged edges, but some light edge haloes cropped up at times. I also suspected a bit of noise reduction, primarily during interiors, but this seemed like less of an issue than during the first movie.

Also as was the case with the first movie, Returns mainly featured a golden palette, and the disc replicated these warm tones nicely. Colors seemed to be vivid and accurate, and other hues also came across well.

The reds of various costumes looked vibrant and solid, and the entire flick showed clean and distinct colors. The disc’s HDR added vibrancy and zest to these tones.

Black levels were deep and rich, but shadows detail became an issue, as the image could look awfully dark at times. Though this seemed like a facet of the original photography to a degree, the 4K looked darker than prior versions. As such, this turned into a more than watchable image but not one that dazzled.

Downconverted to DTS-HD MA 7.1, I felt happy with the excellent DTS X soundtrack of The Mummy Returns. The soundfield presented a broad and consistently engaging affair. All the channels received a strong workout, as they offered a variety of elements throughout the movie.

Music showed good stereo separation and breadth, and effects seemed to be well placed and accurately localized. These aspects came from logical places and they moved neatly between speakers.

The surrounds played an active role in the film, but the many action pieces provided the best examples of the engulfing audio. Probably my favorite scene occurred when Imhotep unleashed the giant wave.

All of the speakers came vividly to life and the sound melded together well to create a clear and vibrant impression. While that sequence worked best, much of the movie included very engrossing sound.

Audio quality also appeared to be top-notch. Despite the fact that much of the speech must have been looped, I thought dialogue always sounded warm and natural. The lines blended well with the action, and I heard no concerns related to intelligibility or edginess.

Music sounded bright and showed good fidelity with fine dynamic range. Effects were the most prominent aspect of the mix, as they presented accurate and bold elements that really created a fine mix.

Bass response was loud and tight, and the low-end really shook the house at times - literally. Ultimately, The Mummy Returns offered a fine audio track that added to the movie.

How did the 4K UHD compare with the Blu-ray version? Audio was a bit smoother and more dynamic, but visuals became more complicated.

On one hand, the 4K offered superior definition and colors. On the other hand, it looked considerably darker, and that became an issue. I’d still prefer it due to the improved areas, but the darkness of the image turned into a drawback.

On the 4K disc, we find an audio commentary from writer/producer/director Stephen Sommers and executive producer/editor Bob Ducsay. Both men sit together for this running, screen-specific affair.

Their Mummy commentary offered an entertaining experience, and their material for Returns repeats the successful track from 1999.

As with their commentary for Mummy, Sommers and Ducsay keep the tone light and lively as they go over a variety of production elements. They cover technical concepts, alterations made to the script, various anecdotes plus a lot of smaller bits, especially in regard to goofs and gaffes.

They seem totally willing to poke affectionate fun at the flick as they told us of their errors and also acknowledged some of the movie’s stretches.

One wonderfully catty aspect comes from their periodic razzing of Roger Ebert. Apparently they felt he took the movie too seriously, so they get back at him for his appraisal of the flick.

Hopefully this won’t seem tastleless now that Ebert has passed, but since the critic was very much alive when Sommers and Ducsay recorded the track in 2001, it shouldn’t be a distraction. This becomes a fun and informative commentary that I definitely enjoyed.

The remaining extras appear on the included Blu-ray copy, where we get an interactive feature called U-Control. While this usually includes a few different elements, The Mummy just goes with picture-in-picture tidbits.

These provide shots from the set, storyboards and remarks from Sommers, producer Jim Jacks, VFX supervisor John Berton, costume designer John Bloomfield, technical director Mark Hamilton, production designer Allan Cameron, and actors Brendan Fraser, The Rock, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah, Oded Fehr, Freddie Boath, and Arnold Vosloo.

We learn about the development of the sequel, new characters and cast members, story issues, visual effects and sets, and costumes.

While I thought the U-Control for The Mummy was lackluster and inefficient, it looks brilliant compared to this dud. For the film’s first half, most of the soundbites relate character/story basics.

Do the disc’s producers not understand that we own the movie and have already watched it? Why throw those kinds of promotional bits into a running movie feature?

As the film progresses, it tends to spend most of its time with effects, and those tidbits can be interesting. However, they’re covered elsewhere on the disc, and those featurettes are more efficient.

I can’t think of much reason to bother with this U-Control. It’s one of the least interesting I’ve seen.

Next come some Outtakes. We discover six-minutes and five-seconds of the usual goof-ups and clowning.

These are mildly entertaining, though the only one that actually makes me laugh briefly features an impression of Scotty from Star Trek by John Hannah. Blink and you’ll miss it, though.

After this we locate a Sneak Peek for 2008’s The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor. In this three-minute clip, we get a few remarks from Ducsay, Sommers, Fraser, director Rob Cohen, and actors Luke Ford, Jet Li, Michelle Yeoh and Maria Bello. The piece exists to promote that movie, so nothing substantial appears here.

Next comes the five-minute, 59-second An Army to Rule the World – Part 2. It features Sommers, Vosloo, Berton, Jacks, and visual effects art director Alex Laurant as they discuss the film’s depiction of the Anubis Warriors and the Pygmy Mummies.

You’ll find a few interesting comments, but the featurette’s brevity means it lacks substance. (Oh, and if you want to see Part 1, you’ll have to get the Blu-ray or 4K of The Mummy.)

Unraveling the Legacy of The Mummy lasts eight minutes, seven seconds and features Sommers, Berton, Jacks, Weisz, Fraser, Hannah, producer Sean Daniel, film historians Steve Haberman and Sir Christopher Frayling, makeup artist Nick Dudman, and author Stephen Jones.

The show nods in the direction of the 1930s Mummy but really exists to promote the 1999 Mummy and Mummy Returns. It’s a superficial puff piece that wastes the viewer’s time.

Visual and Special Effects Formation breaks down into some subsections. There are four movie scenes examined: “Imhotep Returns”, “Pygmy Mummies Attack”, “Anubis Warriors Rising”, and “Scorpion King Revealed”.

Each looks at five different stages, from concept to final, and all except the actual film footage include comments from Berton. The snippets run for a total of 16 minutes, 10 seconds of material.

Overall, this becomes good stuff. The pieces show the elements as they evolved, and they offer some solid insights into the process.

An Exclusive Conversation With the Rock offers a three-minute, 42-second interview clip with the actor. This piece provides little more than a fluffy exercise in which the Rock tells us about Scorpion King and his then-new experiences as an actor. It seems mildly watchable but inconsequential.

The longest program found here is a Spotlight On Location featurette about The Mummy Returns. This 20-minute show provides the standard mix of movie clips - lots of them, actually - plus shots from the set and interview snippets with principals.

Mainly we hear from the actors as well as director Sommers, Jacks, Berton and others. Some of the effects material seems moderately interesting, and I also like some of the “behind the scenes” shots, but as a whole, this is nothing more than a standard promotional piece.

For the most part, it provides footage that tells us about the story and the characters and how great the movie would be. In other words, it’s a thin and superficial show.

Next comes a Storyboard to Final Film Comparison. It breaks into “Blimp Being Chased” (2:32), “Pygmy Chase” (3:15) and “Scorpion King Final Battle” (2:01).

These use the standard format with the movie on the top half of the screen and the boards on the bottom. It’s a good presentation.

Finally, we locate a music video for Live’s “Forever May Not Be Long Enough”. This used the standard video-from-a-movie format.

The band lip-synch in front of an Egyptian-themed setting and those shots get intercut with many movie segments. It seems okay for the genre but it did little for me. The four and a half minute piece also provides an ad for the soundtrack album as a whole.

I feel fairly pleased with The Mummy Returns, as the movie provides a capable extension of the first film. I thought the original seemed fresher and more winning, but the sequel does well in its own right. The 4K UHD offered generally good but erratic picture, terrific sound, and a smattering of mostly positive extras. I maintain some qualms about the visuals, but this still turns into a mainly appealing presentation.

To rate this film, visit the DVD review of THE MUMMY RETURNS

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Review Archive:  # | A-C | D-F | G-I | J-L | M-O | P-R | S-U | V-Z | Viewer Ratings | Main