A Quiet Place Part II appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 2.35:1 on this 4K UHD Disc. This turned into a very appealing Dolby Vision presentation.
Overall sharpness appeared positive. Virtually no issues with softness popped up, so we found a flick that felt accurate and well-defined.
No issues with moiré effects or jaggies occurred, and I saw no signs of edge haloes. Of course, no print flaws marred the image either.
As with the first movie, Place II went with a palette that emphasized teal, orange and yellow, with an occasional splash of red. These colors felt trite but the disc reproduced them as intended, and the disc’s HDR added heft and impact to the tones.
Blacks felt dark and deep, while shadows appeared smooth and concise. HDR gave whites and contrast added boost and emphasis. This was a solid image.
Downconverted to Dolby TrueHD 7.1, the movie’s Dolby Atmos soundtrack proved reminiscent of the first movie’s audio. That it meant it also often took the title to heart, as much of the film came with gentle, low-key material. Despite this, the mix still created a good sense of place and atmosphere, so the track used environmental information in a satisfying manner.
When necessary – such as during this prologue – the soundscape kicked into higher gear. Various elements of mayhem used all the channels in a vivid, compelling manner that made the mix exciting on those occasions.
Audio quality worked nicely, with speech that sounded natural and concise. Music felt lush and full as well.
As noted, effects varied in terms of volume and involvement, but whatever the circumstance, these components seemed rich and clear, with nice low-end and clean highs. The soundtrack acted as a good complement to the story.
How did the 4K UHD compare to the Blu-ray version? Both came with identical Dolby Atmos soundtracks.
On the other hand, the 4K’s Dolby Vision image seemed stronger, as it offered improved delineation, colors and depth. The Blu-ray worked fine but the 4K gave the visuals a nice boost.
No extras appear on the 4K disc itself, but on the included Blu-ray copy, we find five featurettes, and Director’s Diary runs nine minutes, 38 seconds. It offers info from writer/director John Krasinski
He discusses story/characters/themes, sets and locations, stunts and action, and related topics. Some decent notes emerge, but the “Diary” proves less informative than one might hope.
Pulling Back the Curtain goes for three minutes, 47 seconds and offers material with Krasinski, producer Andrew Form, executive producer Allyson Seeger, 2nd unit director/visual effects supervisor Scott Farrar, and actor Emily Blunt.
“Curtain” discusses aspects of the film’s alien creatures. Though brief, it proves reasonably compelling.
Next comes Regan’s Journey, a six-minute, 19-second program with info from Krasinski, Blunt, and actors Millicent Simmonds and Cillian Murphy. As the title implies, it tells us more about the film’s Regan character. It tells us little that doesn’t already seem evident from the movie.
Surviving the Marina lasts five minutes and features Krasinski, Blunt, Farrar, Simmonds, Seeger, Murphy, production designer Jess Gonchor, animation supervisor Rick O’Connor, cinematographer Polly Morgan and assistant art director Zack Gonchor.
As expected, it covers elements connected to the movie’s marina scenes. It proves moderately effective, despite some of the usual happy talk.
Finally, Detectable Disturbance fills eight minutes, 26 seconds and comments from Krasinski, Farrar, O’Connor, visual effects producer Lee Briggs, compositing supervisor Chris Balog, ILM visual effects supervisor Jason Snell, associate animation supervisor Maia Kayser, supervising sound editors Ethan Van Der Ryn and Erik Aadahl, and re-recording mixer Brandon Proctor.
With “Disturbance”, we learn about various effects and sound design choices. It offers arguably the most interesting of the disc’s programs.
Like the first film, A Quiet Place Part II comes blessed with a clever concept. Also like the first film, Place II often squanders its potential to wind up as an erratic, flawed cinematic experience. The 4K UHD boasts strong picture and audio with a mediocre set of bonus materials. Though better than its predecessor, Place II still disappoints.
To rate this film visit the prior review of A QUIET PLACE PART II