Only the Brave appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.40:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. The picture held up well.
Sharpness was solid. A little softness crept into some low-light images, but most of the movie offered good clarity and delineation.
Shimmering and jaggies were absent and edge haloes created no concerns. Print flaws were non-existent, as I detected no specks, marks or other blemishes.
The film’s palette usually opted for a mild teal and orange tint. Within that design range, the colors seemed fine, as they replicated the material appropriately.
Blacks tended to be deep, and shadows usually seemed positive despite a few slightly murky day for night shots. In the end, the picture satisfied.
As for the DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack of Brave, it worked pretty well. While the soundfield didn’t go nuts throughout the whole movie, it kicked into action well when it mattered.
During quieter scenes, the mix boasted good environmental material, and more active sequences delivered fine immersion and punch. The latter provided the muscle that we expected and used the five speakers in an involving manner.
Overall, audio quality appeared good. Speech came across as distinct and well represented. Music presented good dynamics via the score; the music was tight and full.
Effects came across as accurate and firm, with clean highs and deep bass. The soundtrack fell short of greatness, but it mostly served the film well.
How did the Blu-ray compare to the DVD version? The lossless audio added a bit more warmth and range, while visuals were better defined and offered superior colors and blacks. This became the expected upgrade over the DVD.
As we head to extras, we get an audio commentary from director Joseph Kosinski and actor Josh Brolin. Both sit together for this running, screen-specific discussion of story/characters and the source material, sets and locations, stunts, music, editing, cast and performances, and related areas.
Brolin and Kosinski give us a decent track but not one that excels. While they touch on a nice variety of subjects, I don’t think we get great depth. Still, we learn a reasonable amount about the production and the history behind it.
Two Deleted Scenes appear: “Blisters” (1:05) and “Eric Gets a Phone Call” (1:02). These add some minor character tidbits but nothing of real substance.
Three featurettes follow, and these start with the eight-minute, eight-second Honoring the Heroes: The True Stories. It provides notes from Kosinski, Brolin, producers Michael Menchel, Lorenzo di Bonaventura and Erik Howsam, creative consultant/Granite Mountain Hotshot Brendan McDonough, Hotshot’s widow Amanda Marsh, retired Prescott Wildland Fire Chief Duane Steinbrink and wife Marvel Steinbrink, writer Eric Warren Singer, technical advisor/Hotshot Patrick McCarty, and actors James Badge Dale, Andie McDowell, Jennifer Connelly, Jeff Bridges and Miles Teller.
With “Heroes”, we get info about the real story behind the movie as well as its path to the screen. Some good nuggets emerge here, but much of the featurette feels a bit fluffy.
With Boot Camp: Becoming a Hotshot, we find an eight-minute, 42-second reel with notes from Teller, Dale, Kosinski, McCarty, McDonough, Howsam, Brolin, production designer Kevin Kavanaugh, producer/actor Thad Luckinbill, and actors Michael McNulty, Taylor Kitsch, Geoff Stults, Kenny Miller, Jake Picking, Matthew Van Wettering and Alex Russell.
As expected, “Camp” looks at the training to prepare the actors for their parts. Like “Heroes”, it presents decent info but it remains superficial most of the time.
Next comes Behind the Brotherhood: The Characters. It goes for seven minutes, 20 seconds and features Brolin, Dale, Kosinski, McDonough, Howsam, Marsh, Connelly, Teller, Singer, McCarty, Duane Steinbrink, Bridges, Menchel, producers Dawn Ostroff, Jeremy Steckler and Molly Smith, Hotshot/actor Brendan Bunch, and actor Scott Foxx. With a view of the movie’s roles, it offers another mix of useful material and puffy sentiment.
After this we find a music video for “Hold the Light” by Dierks Bentley Featuring S. Carey. It provides a mix of lip-synch performance and movie clips to become a forgettable video.
We also go Behind the Song for more info about “Hold the Light”. The two-minute, 42-second piece features Bentley as he chats about the inspiration for the song; Brendan McDonough also tosses out brief comments. We don’t get much substance here.
The disc opens with ads for Crooked House, Professor Marston and the Wonder Women, All Saints, Golden Exits, Accident Man and November Criminals. No trailer for Brave appears here.
Although much of Only the Brave feels fairly typical for its genre, the movie gains impact at its conclusion. A tale with a brutal, emotionally wrenching finale, that last act gives it strength. The Blu-ray offers very good picture and audio along with a decent selection of supplements. Brave lacks consistency but it packs a punch in the end.
To rate this film visit the prior review of ONLY THE BRAVE