Real Life appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.85:1 on this 4K UHD Disc. This wound up as a high quality presentation.
Sharpness appeared positive. The movie’s style left us with a handful of slightly fuzzy shots, but the vast majority of the flick boasted positive delineation.
I saw no signs of moiré effects or jagged edges, and edge haloes remained absent. Grain felt appropriate and the image lacked print flaws.
With a natural palette, the film displayed a good array of colors. Nothing here dazzled but the hues seemed appropriate for the movie’s style, and HDR added a little pep to the tones.
Black levels seemed solid, with dark tones that appeared deep and rich. Low light shots came across as concise. Whites and contrast enjoyed a bit of a boost from HDR. This was a pretty solid image.
As for the LCPM monaural soundtrack of Real Life,I thought the track sounded okay and not much more. Speech showed a little tinniness but remained acceptably distinctive and lacked problems with intelligibility.
Music failed to demonstrate much life. These components were concise and without flaws, but it didn’t show great range.
Effects fell into the same category. Those elements sounded fairly clean and weren’t distorted, but they never stood out as bright or rich. This was a listenable mix with no particular strengths.
How did the Criterion 4K UHD compare to their Blu-ray version? Both provided identical audio.
Visuals seemed fairly similar, though the 4K showed a mild step up in terms of delineation, colors and blacks. While I couldn’t claim the 4K blew away the Blu-ray, it seemed a bit more satisfying.
No extras show up on the 4K disc, but the included Blu-ray copy comes with a small collection of extras. A new Interview with Writer/Director/Actor Albert Brooks runs 30 minutes, 25 seconds.
This chat offers Brooks’ thoughts about the film’s origins and development, cast and performances, inspirations, and some specifics of the production. We get some good notes here, even though I’d prefer a commentary.
Another circa 2024 piece, we find an Interview with Actor Frances Lee McCain. Her discussion goes for 14 minutes, 42 seconds.
McCain talks about her casting and performance as well as working with Brooks and aspects of the project and its shoot. Inevitably, McCain seems less informative than Brooks, but she gives us a good perspective on the film.
We also get the film’s trailer, and it’s a hoot. It consists of footage shot explicitly for the promo – and comes in anaglyph 3D to boot!
We also get the film’s trailer, and it’s a hoot. It consists of footage shot explicitly for the promo – and comes in anaglyph 3D to boot!
I guess – I didn’t dig up those red/blue glasses to test the image. Nonetheless, this becomes one of the funniest trailers I’ve ever seen.
We finish with a booklet that provides credits, art and an essay from critic AS Hamrah. It completes matters on a positive note.
As a spoof of documentaries, Real Life boasts immense potential, and it occasionally proves amusing. However, it seems thin on substance and feels more like a short stretched to feature length than a fully realized project. The 4K UHD offers strong picture, adequate audio along and a handful of bonus materials. Real Life ends up as a spotty comedy.
To rate this film visit the DVD review of REAL LIFE