Under Siege appears in an aspect ratio of 1.85:1 on this Blu-ray Disc. This became an appealing presentation.
Overall delineation looked fine. A few interiors could show a smidgen of softness, but these instances remained minor at worst.
No issues with jagged edges or shimmering manifested, and I saw no edge haloes. Print flaws remained absent and grain seemed light.
Perhaps a little too light, as I wondered if some grain reduction entered the equation. However, the end product didn't show the telltale signs of that technique so if this occurred, it seemed modest enough to ensure it didn't damage the image.
The film’s palette leaned toward a mix of blues and ambers, with a red lean at times. This meant a limited range of hues but the disc replicated them in a solid manner.
Blacks felt dark and deep, while low-light shots enjoyed good clarity. This became a solid reproduction of the source.
Downconverted to Dolby TrueHD 7.1, the Dolby Atmos remix brought a soundfield that suited a big violent action movie. This meant a lot of material from all around the spectrum.
Of course, scenes with aircraft or weapons fared best, as they created a solid sense of involvement. Quieter scenes added an appealing vibe as well, so this turned into a pretty engaging soundscape.
Audio quality mostly worked fine, with speech that appeared natural and concise. Music showed solid range and dimensionality.
A few elements displayed a bit of distortion, but effects usually came across as accurate and full. Overall, the track satisfied.
How did this Arrow Blu-ray compare to the movie's prior BD? The Atmos audio expanded matters somewhat and became a bit more involving.
Visuals boasted mpre obvious improvements, as the 2025 disc looked tighter and more film-like. The old BD actually held up well given it came out in the format's infancy, but the new one offered a solid upgrade.
While the Blu-ray included virtually no extras, we get an array here, and we start with an audio commentary from director Andrew Davis and screenwriter JF Lawton. Both sit together for this running, screen-specific look at story and characters, cast and performances, sets and locations, stunts and action,
If you expect lots of good stories and insights from Davis and Lawton, I bear bad news, as both come in short supply. While we find occasional nuggets of value, this remains a largely slow and dull commentary that doesn't give us much real substance.
A few featurettes follow, and I'm On a Boat (With a Bomb) goes for 19 minutes, eight seconds. We get more info from Davis here.
The director talks about what brought him to Under Siege as well as sets and locations, casting and working with Steven Seagal, stunts and action, and a few related notes. Though not packed with fascinating notes, "Boat" still fares better than the tepid commentary.
One of the Guys spans 13 minutes, 52 seconds. Here we receive thoughts from actor Erika Eleniak.
She discusses her career along with her experiences on Under Siege. Eleniak proves frank and engaging.
Next we go to A Tight Ship. This one lasts 18 minutes, 35 seconds and features actor Damian Chapa.
Like Eleniak, Chapa chats about his time as an actor as well as what he remembers about the Under Siege production. Chapa brings us a decent array of thoughts but his chat lacks the quality we got from Eleniak.
Along with the film's trailer, we conclude with The Introvision Files. During this 27-minute, 51-second interview, we locate remarks from visual effects supervisor William Mesa.
He tells us about his use of the "Introvision" compositing process during Under Siege. Mesa covers this territory well.
Note that another featurette with Mesa under the same "Introvision Files" title appears on Arrow's Outland. I thought this one might be identical but happily it brings us fresh info from Mesa.
If you don't know the basics of Introvision, though, you'd need to watch the extras on Outland. That set gets into the process in more detail and it feels like this one assumes you already know those details.
With Under Siege, we get arguably the best film of Steven Seagal’s career. Granted, that exists as the definition of ‘faint praise’, but the movie nonetheless becomes a pretty solid Die Hard wannabe despite the weaknesses of its lead actor. The Blu-ray comes with solid positive picture and audio as well as a mostly positive roster of supplements. Nothing here turns Under Siege into a classic but it still delivers enough excitement to make it worth a look.