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WARNER

MOVIE INFO

Director:
Sam Liu, Lauren Montgomery
Cast:
Bryan Cranston, Ben McKenzie, Eliza Dushku
Writing Credits:
Tab Murphy

Synopsis:
A wealthy playboy and a Chicago cop both return to Gotham City where their lives will intersect in unexpected ways.

MPAA:
Rated PG-13.

DISC DETAILS
Presentation:
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Audio:
English DTS-HD MA 5.1
French Dolby 5.1
Spanish Dolby 2.0
German Dolby 5.1
Subtitles:
English
French
Spanish
German
Closed-captioned
Supplements Subtitles:
English
French
Spanish
German

Runtime: 64 min.
Price: $14.98
Release Date: 10/18/2011

Bonus:
• Audio Commentary with Co-Producer Alan Burnett, Co-Director Sam Liu, DC Creative Director Mike Carlin and Voice Director Andrea Romano
• “DC Showcase: Catwoman” Short
Justice League: Doom Sneak Peek
All-Star Superman Sneak Peek
Green Lantern: Emerald Knights Sneak Peek
&bull: “Heart of Vengeance” Featurette
&bull: “Conversations with DC Comics” Featurette
• Two Animated TV Episodes
• Previews


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RELATED REVIEWS


Batman: Year One [Blu-Ray] (2011)

Reviewed by Colin Jacobson (October 5, 2023)

Over the last 35 years, did anyone do more to aid the Batman franchise than Frank Miller? Sure, Tim Burton and Chris Nolan managed to turn the character into cinematic gold, but I doubt they could’ve done so without the groundwork writer/artist Miller laid.

With 1986’s The Dark Knight Returns and 1987’s Batman: Year One, Miller managed to utterly revitalize the hero. Year One gets its full due with this 2011 animated adventure.

After years away from home, Bruce Wayne (voiced by Ben McKenzie) returns to Gotham City. While gone, he trained in martial arts, and he now plans to use his abilities to take out his anger on the town’s rampant criminal element.

At the same time, police Lieutenant James Gordon (Bryan Cranston) transfers to the Gotham force due to some problems with Internal Affairs at his old job. He comes with his pregnant wife Barbara (Grey DeLisle) and encounters a city and a police department packed to the gills with crime and corruption. Year One follows both men’s initial year in Gotham as they deal with the nastiness around them – and also cross paths as well.

Back when Dark Knight Returns hit in 1986, I was a lapsed comic book fan. Granted, I’d not been away from the mags for long.

I was a huge comic buyer from mid-1981 through early 1984 or so. This meant that I’d only been inactive for about two years.

I never lost my affection for superheroes, but I stopped purchasing the comics mainly due to economics. I was in high school back then and shifted the money I previously sent to Marvel and DC toward music.

Not coincidentally, I didn’t buy many albums from 1981 through 1983. Eventually I chose to spend my (fairly limited) funds on records and concert tickets.

What brought me to purchase Dark Knight Returns? I heard so many good things about it that I couldn’t resist, and it didn’t disappoint. It delivered an amazing Batman adventure and remains possibly my favorite Caped Crusader tale.

I next experienced a bit of Batmania in 1989 when the Tim Burton film became such a hit. I don’t think I’d been aware of Miller’s Year One when it came out in 1987, but the 1989 flick reawakened my passion for all things Bat so I grabbed a copy.

And I thought it was pretty good. Not great, not bad – pretty good.

I do recall that I felt disappointed by it given how much I loved Returns. In no way, shape or form did Year One compare to that epic.

Decades after I read the Year One comics, I checked out this animated take on it – and I thought it was… pretty good. Once again, that made it a disappointment.

I felt the previews for Year One promised a more scintillating experience. The Batman direct-to-video film prior to this one - Under the Red Hood - was excellent, so I hoped Year One would offer a second killer flick.

Alas, that wasn’t to be, though I suspect my issues stem from the original comics. The animated Year One delivers a pretty literal adaptation of Miller’s work, so don’t expect much variation. Since I wasn’t ecstatic with the comics, my relative disenchantment spreads to the movie.

And my relative disenchantment remains tough to pinpoint. Perhaps I just don’t much care for the story’s emphasis on Lieutenant Gordon.

I don’t say this from some sort of purist point of view that wants a Batman film to focus on the lead character to the exclusion of all else. In theory, I’m fine with the tale’s emphasis on Gordon.

In reality, I can’t say that that side of things works for me. There’s nothing explicitly wrong with Gordon’s narrative, though it feels somewhat trite.

Maybe that’s decades of perspective talking, as we’ve seen similar themes in other works – and in the Nolan Batman movies. Earlier I referred to this version as the graphic novel’s “full due”.

I said that because the Nolan flicks definitely showed a Year One influence. They didn’t formally adapt the book, but they used some of its elements.

Nonetheless, I don’t find a lot of interest within Gordon’s story, and I feel like his screentime takes away real estate that should be devoted to Bruce/Batman’s development. Year One clocks in at a mere 64 minutes, so that doesn’t leave a lot of room for the two roles to grow.

Rather than deliver a complex dual narrative, the parts come across as truncated. We just don’t see enough of Gordon and Bruce to satisfy – and since the movie’s called Batman: Year One, it feels like Gordon’s moments take away from time best spent with the lead.

Throw in the birth of Catwoman and Year One becomes an awfully crowded 64 minutes.

Maybe Year One also seems to shortchange the Batman narrative because Batman Begins does it so well. As I alluded earlier, both share some components, but the Nolan film provides a much more detailed, fulfilling take on the crimefighter’s early days. Year One just seems like a Cliffs Notes version.

None of these complaints should imply that Year One turns into a failure or lacks any material of interest. Even with the narrative flaws, it still has some strong moments and looks good along the way. It delivers a dark, rich take on Gotham and gives us a fine sense of tone.

It throws in some solid action sequences as well. The climax works pretty nicely, and the part in which Batman deals with a SWAT team offers the movie’s best set piece.

Unfortunately, we don’t get enough material of this sort – or enough character depth – to make Year One consistently compelling. As a Batman fan, I can find value in it, but the movie just feels too clipped and abbreviated to soar.


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

Batman: Year One appears in an aspect ratio of approximately 1.78:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. Expect a high-quality image.

Sharpness worked well. Hardly a sliver of softness interfered, so we wound up with a tight, precise presentation.

No instances of shimmering and jaggies appeared, and I noticed no edge haloes. Source flaws remained absent.

Year One came with a subdued semi-sepia palette, which is what I would expect from a Batman story. Nonetheless, the colors were fine, as all seemed full and clear within design choices.

Blacks were dark and deep, while shadows became smooth and concise. Everything about the picture satisfied.

In addition, the DTS-HD MA 5.1 soundtrack of Year One opened up the comic book material well. This wasn’t a tremendously ambitious piece, but it added pizzazz to the program.

The forward channels brought out the majority of the material. Music presented strong stereo imaging, while effects cropped up in logical spots and blended well.

The surrounds also contributed good information. For the most part, these reinforced the forward channels, but they also contributed a fair amount of unique material.

These instances mainly occurred during bigger action scenes and some weather-related elements. The back speakers brought out a nice sense of space and environment.

Audio quality always satisfied. Speech was warm and natural, without edginess or other issues.

Music sounded lively and full, while effects displayed good definition. Those elements seemed accurate and dynamic. All of this led to a positive presentation that deserved a “B+”.

How did the Blu-ray compare to the DVD version? The BD’s lossless audio showed stronger range and clarity.

Visuals demonstrated a nice upgrade, as the BD seemed better defined. It also showed superior colors and blacks to become an obvious step up in quality.

The Blu-ray replicates the DVD’s extras and adds others, and we start with an audio commentary from co-director Sam Liu, casting director Andrea Romano, DC Creative Director Mike Carlin and co-producer Alan Burnett. All four sit together for a running, screen-specific look at story/characters, cast and performances, art and animation.

Of the participants, Romano proves most informative, as she gets into aspects of her work well. Overall, however, the commentary lacks a lot of insights, as it gives us basics, praise and not much more.

DC Showcase: Catwoman offers a 14-minute, 50-second animated short. itshows Catwoman (voiced by Eliza Dushku) as she goes after a diamond smuggling thug named Rough Cut (John DiMaggio). It’s not a deep story, but it packs a lot of good action and turns into a fun piece.

Three previews follow. We get these for Justice League: Doom (10:17), All-Star Superman (10:47) and Green Lantern: Emerald Knights (11:38).

Across these, we hear from a mix of personnel. Doom provides remarks from co-producer Alan Burnett, executive producer Bruce Timm, voice director Andrea Romano, director Lauren Montgomery, lead character designer Phil Bourassa, storyboard artist Mel Zwyer, and actors Tim Daly, Susan Eisenberg, Carlos Alazraqui, Carl Lumbly, Nathan Fillion, and Michael Rosenbaum.

Superman provides comments from Romano, Timm, director Sam Liu, DCE SVP Creative Affairs Gregory Noveck, and actors James Denton, Anthony LaPaglia, and Christina Hendricks.

Finally, Knights features Burnett, Montgomery, Romano, Timm, Fillion, DC Comics co-publisher Dan DiDio, animation director Jay Oliva, and actor Henry Rollins.

All three exist as little more than promotion, and they’re fairly effective in that regard. Nonetheless, they remain long ads, so don’t expect more from them.

Next we find a featurette called Heart of Vengeance: Returning Batman to His Roots. In this 23-minute, 25-second program, we hear from Alan Burnett, Detective Comics writer Greg Rucka, writer/former editor Denny O’Neil, Dark Knight Rises executive producer Michael Uslan, Detective Comics writer/former editor Len Wein, and DC Entertainment Creative Director Mike Carlin.

The piece looks at Batman’s development over the years and what Frank Miller brought to the character in the 1980s. We get a decent overview here, but much of the show feels like little more than a love letter to Miller, so don’t expect much from it.

Under Bruce Timm’s Top Picks, we locate two TV episodes. These include “Catwalk” from Batman: The Animated Series (21:16) and “Cult of the Cat” from The New Batman Adventures (21:21).

Since she straddles the line between hero and villain - and also seeks to straddle Batman - the Catwoman remains arguably Batman’s most intriguing nemesis. She shows both sides well in the entertaining “Catwalk”.

A good use of the Ventriloquist helps make this episode solid. He works better in a secondary position than in the starring role, which allows him to be effective here.

As for “Cult”, it suffers from a weak villain and overall plot, as the notion of the gang that worships felines feels pretty lame. However, the interactions between Batman and Catwoman crackle. Those add more than enough pizzazz to turn this into an enjoyable show.

Conversations with DC Comics spans 39 minutes, 27 seconds. It involves Dennis O’Neil, Michael Uslan, Dan DiDio, and comics writer Scott Snyder.

They discuss what introduced them to Batman, aspects of the character’s continuity and evolution, and aspects of Year One. This turns into a solid examination of various Bat-topics.

The disc opens with ads for Smallville: The Complete Series, Green Lantern: The Animated Series and Aim High. Trailers adds promos for Thundercats, Mad, and Young Justice.

Adapted from a much praised comic book, Batman: Year One has its moments, but it doesn’t provide a lot of satisfaction. At a mere 64 minutes, it simply lacks the breathing room to develop its characters and give us a vivid tale. The Blu-ray offers very good picture and audio along a nice array of supplements. Bat-fans will want to give this one a look, but they shouldn’t expect greatness from it.

To rate this film, visit the prior review of BATMAN: YEAR ONE

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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