The digital presentation is also clean, and I didn’t spot any artifacts of note. Everything is clearly defined with nice crisp edges and you can make the out finer object details, even in the longer shots (a few exterior shots are notably breathtaking). Brighter scenes also look excellent, with some extremely bright whites (the two antagonists wear a lot of white), but they never bloom or bleed. A good portion of the film takes place in dark or low-lit settings, which looked a bit muddy on the older Kino DVD, but is no longer the case here thanks to inkier black levels and better colour saturation, which aids in bestowing a sharper image that delivers superb shadow detail. The 1080p/24hz encode has been sourced from a new 2K restoration, scanned from the 35mm original camera negative.Īs is pretty much expected the new restoration and final digital presentation looks superb. The 1997 version of Michael Haneke’s Funny Games enters the Criterion Collection with this new Blu-ray edition, featuring the film in its original aspect ratio of 1.85:1 on a dual-layer disc.
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