Transformers One appears in an aspect ratio of 2.35:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. As expected, the movie came with a terrific visual presentation.
At all times, sharpness excelled. The film offered tight, concise imagery without a hint of softness along the way.
I saw no signs of jagged edges or shimmer, and edge haloes also failed to appear. In addition, source flaws never created distractions.
Colors offered quality material, as the movie’s palette came across with punch. Though much of the film opted for the usual orange/amber and teal, the settings and characters came with enough variety to add spark to the proceedings.
Blacks seemed deep and dense, while shadows were smooth and clear. This turned into a top-notch image.
Downconverted to Dolby TrueHD 7.1, the movie’s Dolby Atmos soundtrack added pizzazz to the proceedings. As expected, the battle or flight-based scenes offered the greatest sense of activity and involvement, as those used the elements to swarm and move around the room in an engulfing manner.
Other scenes created a good sense of the story as well. Even basic environmental sequences worked well and delivered a nice experience.
Audio quality succeeded as well, with natural, concise dialogue. Music seemed full and rich.
In addition, effects appeared accurate and distinctive, with nice low-end response. The soundtrack suited the film and added excitement.
Five featurettes appear, and In the Beginning runs 10 minutes, 14 seconds. It provides comments from director Josh Cooley, producers Aaron Dem, Mark Vahradian and Lorenzo di Bonaventura, executive producer Zev Foreman, production designer Jason Scheier, writer Eric Pearson, editor Lynn Hobson, head of cinematography Christopher Batty, and actors Brian Tyree Henry, Keegan-Michael Key, Chris Hemsworth, and Scarlett Johansson.
The show looks at story and characters, the shift from live-action Transformers to animation, cast and performances, what Cooley brings to the project, and animation techniques. Though it comes with some fluff, this nonetheless turns into a moderately informative piece.
World Building on Cybertron spans nine minutes, 37 seconds. This one involves Dem, Cooley, Key, Foreman, di Bonaventura, Scheier, Vahradian, animation supervisors Rob Coleman and Stephen King and visual effects supervisor Frazer Churchill.
“World” examines the movie’s depiction of the planet Cybertron and its inhabitants. Despite some of the same self-praise found in the prior show, “World” nonetheless comes with enough substance to make it worthwhile.
With Together As One, e find an 11-minute reel. It gives us notes from Cooley, Dem, Vahradian, di Bonaventura, Henry, Hemsworth, Key, and Johansson.
This brings us a look at cast and performances. It becomes another reasonably useful mix of puffery and insights.
The Iacon 5000 lasts six minutes, 26 seconds. Here we discover remarks from Cooley, Hobson, Hemsworth, di Bonaventura, Foreman, Vahradian, Scheier, Dem, Batty and visual effects producer Fiona Chilton.
As implied by the title, “5000” deals with the movie’s race sequence. It functions in a positive manner.
Finally, The Battle for Cybertron occupies eight minutes, 59 seconds. It provides statements from Hobson, di Bonaventura, Hemsworth, Batty, Cooley, Key, Pearson, Dem, Vahradian, Foreman, Scheier and compositing supervisor Alex Fry.
“Battle” gets into the movie’s climactic sequence. It becomes another reasonably informative reel.
After 17 years, Transformers One finally brings a Transformers movie that I liked With a lot of heart, laughs and action, the film becomes an enjoyable origin story. The Blu-ray boasts excellent picture and audio as well as a decent collection of bonus materials. A pleasant surprise, this turns into a solid adventure.
Note that this Blu-ray only comes paired with the movie’s 4K UHD version. Oddly, Paramount chose not to release a solo Blu-ray for Transformers One.
This means Blu-ray fans without 4K UHD players will need to buy this package to get the movie’s BD.