

Thirty years after the events of the first film, a new blade runner, LAPD Officer K (Ryan Gosling), unearths a longburied secret that has the potential to plunge what’s left of society into chaos. K’s discovery leads him on a quest to find Rick Deckard (Harrison Ford), a former LAPD blade runner who has been missing for 30 years Review: Demo-Worthy – The Ultimate Way to Experience Blade Runner 2049 - If you want a disc that will show off what your home theater system can really do, this is it! Blade Runner 2049 on 4K UHD is reference quality from start to finish and easily earns 5 stars. Video Quality: The 4K transfer with HDR is jaw-dropping. The neon-lit cityscapes, desert wastelands, and moody interiors all pop with incredible detail and contrast. Blacks are inky but never crushed, and highlights have a richness that streaming just can’t deliver. Every texture—rain, dust, skin, fabric—feels more lifelike. Compared to streaming, the difference is night and day; it’s like watching the film for the first time again, almost theatrical in scope. Audio Quality: The Dolby Atmos mix is demo material. Hans Zimmer and Benjamin Wallfisch’s score rumbles with chest-thumping bass, and the sound design surrounds you from every direction. Distant echoes, environmental effects, and flying vehicles overhead put you right inside the world. Even with a modest 7.2.4 Atmos setup, this disc makes you feel like you’re sitting in a high-end cinema. Bottom Line: This is the definition of demo-worthy. If you want to flex your system or experience Blade Runner 2049 the way it was meant to be seen and heard (at 0.0db Reference Level), the 4K disc is essential. Streaming doesn’t come close—this is pure home theater magic. Review: Good 4K disk to test out a 4K blu-ray player - I needed a 4K Blu-ray to play in the Sony 4K player, and this is a good disk to test it with


| ASIN | B075DQGW92 |
| Actors | Ana de Armas, Harrison Ford, Robin Wright, Ryan Gosling, Sylvia Hoeks |
| Aspect Ratio | Unknown |
| Best Sellers Rank | #75 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #34 in Action & Adventure Blu-ray Discs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (6,209) |
| Digital Copy Expiration Date | March 31, 2019 |
| Director | Denis Villeneuve |
| Dubbed: | French, Spanish |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | B075DQGW92 |
| Language | English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1), English (Dolby Atmos), English (Dolby Digital 5.1), Spanish (Dolby Digital 5.1) |
| MPAA rating | R (Restricted) |
| Media Format | 4K |
| Number of discs | 2 |
| Producers | Andrew A. Kosove, Broderick Johnson, Bud Yorkin, Ridley Scott, Tim Gamble |
| Product Dimensions | 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.4 ounces |
| Release date | January 16, 2018 |
| Run time | 2 hours and 43 minutes |
| Studio | Warner Home Video |
| Subtitles: | English, French, Spanish |
P**L
Demo-Worthy – The Ultimate Way to Experience Blade Runner 2049
If you want a disc that will show off what your home theater system can really do, this is it! Blade Runner 2049 on 4K UHD is reference quality from start to finish and easily earns 5 stars. Video Quality: The 4K transfer with HDR is jaw-dropping. The neon-lit cityscapes, desert wastelands, and moody interiors all pop with incredible detail and contrast. Blacks are inky but never crushed, and highlights have a richness that streaming just can’t deliver. Every texture—rain, dust, skin, fabric—feels more lifelike. Compared to streaming, the difference is night and day; it’s like watching the film for the first time again, almost theatrical in scope. Audio Quality: The Dolby Atmos mix is demo material. Hans Zimmer and Benjamin Wallfisch’s score rumbles with chest-thumping bass, and the sound design surrounds you from every direction. Distant echoes, environmental effects, and flying vehicles overhead put you right inside the world. Even with a modest 7.2.4 Atmos setup, this disc makes you feel like you’re sitting in a high-end cinema. Bottom Line: This is the definition of demo-worthy. If you want to flex your system or experience Blade Runner 2049 the way it was meant to be seen and heard (at 0.0db Reference Level), the 4K disc is essential. Streaming doesn’t come close—this is pure home theater magic.
R**J
Good 4K disk to test out a 4K blu-ray player
I needed a 4K Blu-ray to play in the Sony 4K player, and this is a good disk to test it with
G**N
Great
Great dvd love it a classic Great
S**R
A good sequel
This is the 2017 long-awaited sequel to the (now) iconic 1984 film Blade Runner, which starred Harrison Ford a Deckard, a Blade Runner who hunted down and retried Artificially Intelligent Androids called Replicants. This movie is set 30 years after the original movie. We find out that the Tyrell Corporation has been taken over and is now the Wallace Corporation, run by Niander Wallace (played by Jared Leto). The corporation still makes replicants and has basically turned them into slaves, and the Earth has become a dystopian nightmare, in large part due to an electromagnetic pulse that wiped everything out in 2022. Ryan Gossling plays K, the most advanced replicant (a Nexus-9 Replicant) who is a Blade Runner that hunts down and retires rogue replicants. In the process of retiring a replicant at the beginning of the movie, he discovers evidence that replicants can reproduce biologically, and this leads him, through a series of events, to finding Deckard (again played by Ford). I will not spoil the movie for those who have not seen it, but if you have seen the original movies, similar themes play out in this movie that did in the first one. For those who get the 4-k blu-ray, it is a two-disc set with a UHD disc just containing the movie and a regular blu-ray with the movie and the extras. The A/V quality of the UHD disc is top-notch, pretty much what I would call reference quality. There are, of course, a lot of CGI effects in the movie, and everything looks seamless so, if not for flying cars and the like, it would be hard to tell what is real and what is not. The extras include two longer featurettes, one 17 minutes and one about 22 minutes, that focus on casting and the look of the new movie. Then there are a series of prologues which are prequel shorts to the movie that provides some backstory. The longest is just over 15 minutes and the other two are around 6 minutes. Then there are a series of short featurettes that total 11 minutes and can be played all at once, which cover different aspects of the Blade Runner world. Then there is a trailer for the game that was released around the same time as the movie. All in all, the extras total about an hour and twenty minutes, give or take. Overall, the movie is very good. The writers did a good job incorporating parts of the story from the original film into a new, updated movie, and made it work. The cast is very strong and includes Robin Wright, Ana De Armas (in her first major role in the US), and Dave Bautista. The movie even finds a way to incorporate Sean Young's character (using a similar kind of CGI and real actor blend that was used in Rouge One) from the first movie without her appearing in person (although she is still credited as appearing as Rachael). Like the first movie, it is hard to classify what genre this is. It is a movie that has a lot of action, but it is not really an action movie per-se. It is a mix of action, drama, philosophy, and thought experiment all rolled into one. The acting is top-notch with Gossling doing a great job taking over the leading role, and Ford steps back into the role of Deckard well. It is a worthy follow-up to the first movie and is definitely worth watching.
W**N
Classic film receives an unexpected sequel that Almost rivals the original.
When has a cult classic that failed at the box office gotten a sequel? I can count the times on half a hand. “Blade Runner 2049” banked on that cache unfortunately, while it did well, the cost of the sequel prevented it from becoming a box office winner. In the long term that doesn’t matter though as this direct sequel is a worth follow up to Ridley Scott’s 1982 film. It does have its flaws that Scott’s original release but they aren’t as bad as could have been. Set nearly three decades after the original,film, Replicants are still out there and still on the run. Rather than rely on humans to retire them (and whether or not you believe Scott’s take on the original character of Rick Decars or not doesn’t really come into play), the force that retires them now relies on a Replicant that is less human than human who goes by K (Ryan Gosling).:He gets called into a termination that calls into question whether the most famous pair to escape ‘justice’ Deckard (Harrison Ford) and Rachel (Sean Young ) are still alive. Complicated by the fact that Niander Wallace, who,has bought the troubled Tyrell Corporarion, wants to create Rwplicants who can reproduce and is also looking for the pair, K has his job cut out for him. He also begins to sense what he is missing-the more human than human aspect that informed early Replicants. Directed by Denis Villenvue from a script by Hampton Fancher (who co-wrote the original film) and Michael Greene (based on a story idea by Scott and Fancher), the film is awash with the characteristic production design and photography that made the original film so memorable. While it does run too long by about 20 minutes,,the film is a fitting sequel to the original. The 4k looks exceptional although this is not the IMAX released version but the standard theatrical cut. The impressive production design benefited from the taller presentation of the film. The monochrome look of the film with desaturated colors is intentional. Detail remains exceptional on this digitally shot production. The 4K version wins over the standard blu-ray due to the format itself and presentation. The blu-ray looks fine but all the extras are crammed on the Blu-ray with a film that is well over two and a half hours long. That means that the space for the feature is limited somewhat by the extras (though it should be noted one really would be hard pressed to tell except on the largest possible monitor). The Dolby Atmos mix is rich with detail and puts one smack dab in the environment. The special features are copious with two featurettes, three “prequel” shorts that set up what occurred between the original film and now (and is alluded to in the sequel), and six short featurettes on the universe of the film. These are all located only on the Blu-ray (not 4K) disc. What’s missing is an in depth commentary track. “Blade Runner 2049” turned out to be a worthy sequel to the original film marred by some pacing and length issues. It isn’t a perfect sequel but it does measure up well to the original. It’s a worth while film that focuses as much on character as the built up to the mystery of locating Deckard and Rachel. There are some terrific performances as well in the film and some notable supporting cast members that do an outstanding job in the film. Will you enjoy it? Just go in knowing that the pacing is a slow burn and the film runs a bit too long and you will. Highly recommended.
S**.
Arrived on time, good addition to my coillection
R**I
Não tem opção dublado nem legendas em português, totalmente em inglês.
A**T
De las mejores que he visto; sin duda el director tiene una sensibilidad por la calidad visual, una historia refinada, efectos excelentes, estética muy bien cuidada. Excelentes actores. Lo que si, es que estos discos Blue Ray, en una TV de 4K ya no se ve m con la nitidez que se ve en un TV Full HD en donde el formato se ve excelente.
E**K
If you want to try your new 4K ultra HD and your Dolby atmos audio system , this is the movie you need to have
J**I
Achei que vinha apenas o blu-ray 4k, mas vem um blu-ray normal. Só não tem áudio e legenda em português, mas a edição é show de bola.
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