Videodrone's best of 2012 on Blu-ray
The top disc releases of the year, part 2
While you can find many of the best Blu-ray releases in my countdown of the Top Ten disc releases of 2012, this is a list of the top Blu-ray debuts of films previously available on DVD only, upgraded with new transfers and digital masters.
The Best of Blu-ray
1. "Lawrence of Arabia: Fiftieth Anniversary" (Sony) presents the long-awaited Blu-ray debut of one of the most beloved film classics and most intelligent cinema epics. This exhaustive 4k digital restoration of David Lean's masterpiece builds on the 1989 version with newly-available digital tools to repair previously irreparable footage and pull out a clarity beyond what was not possible before. Which is just what Sony was awaiting before releasing one of the most beloved film classics and most intelligent cinema epics to Blu-ray.
How does this look? To quote T.E. Lawrence: "It's clean." Yes, and it's clear and sharp and strong, as beautiful a Blu-ray as you've seen. The original camera negative was scanned at 8k, creating an enormous digital snapshot of every frame of film to work from, and then the finished production was "down-rezzed" to 4k for digital projection and digital mastering on Blu-ray. It's packed with supplements, including the never-before-released extended version of the "Balcony Scene" with Peter O'Toole and Jack Hawkins, a sequence that Lean was unable to put back into his reconstruction due to missing elements. The producers of the disc have not inserted it into the film -- for better or worse, the version presented here is the one that Lean signed off on in 1989 -- but this sequence is legendary among "Lawrence" fans and editor Anne V. Coates puts it in context in a video introduction. Finally seeing it is a true pleasure. (Full review here)
2. "Universal Classic Monsters: The Essential Collection" (Universal) presents the long-awaited Blu-ray debuts of the most famous Universal monster movies from the thirties through the fifties: "Dracula" (1931) with Bela Lugosi, "Frankenstein" (1931), "The Mummy" (1932), and "The Bride of Frankenstein" (1935) with Boris Karloff, "The Invisible Man" (1933) with Claude Rains, and "The Wolf Man" (1941) with Lon Chaney Jr., plus the Technicolor "Phantom of the Opera" (1943) with Claude Rains and "Creature From the Black Lagoon" (1954) from the fifties era of Universal monster movies, a ninth feature -- the 1931 Spanish language "Dracula" -- and the 3D version of "Creature" (requires a full HD 3D TV, compatible 3D glasses, and a Blu-ray 3D player). It presents magnificent new HD masters of each film, all with a significant leap in detail, sharpness, and contrast from the previous (superb) DVD editions. The earlier films are the most impressive, given their age and the results on screen. Great care was lavished in the sets, lighting, and make-up of these films and these editions preserve the depth and detail and texture of this era's studio filmmaking. I love the richness of black and white on a well-mastered Blu-ray and these are superb. Universal does this one up right, complete with a treasure trove of documentaries, commentary tracks, and more. (Full review here)
3. "Jaws" (Universal), Steven Spielberg’s meticulously-directed, tension-filled, career-redefining thrill machine, has been pegged as the original modern summer blockbuster. And while that is true, this pop-culture masterpiece is more than simply a well-tooled thriller. Spielberg brings a sense of community, family, and humanity to the supermarket thriller from Peter Benchley, a book more designed than written. This is an elemental monster movie as well-tooled thriller invading the comfort zone of the suburban summer vacation. The restoration and digital transfer are top notch and the Blu-ray debut features the legendary, years-in-the-making documentary "The Shark is Still Working: The Impact and Legacy of Jaws" along with the previously available supplements. (Full review here)
4. "Casablanca" (Warner) is a beauty of a special edition. For the 70th Anniversary, Warner has remastered the film in a 4K scan (theatrical big screen quality) for a three-disc deluxe Blu-ray+DVD Combo edition with two new documentaries plus all the supplements of the previous special editions (and there have been many). The transfer is an improvement over the 2008 Blu-ray release, with greater clarity and detail and a sensitivity to the original black and white film that preserves the texture of the original without drawing attention to the grain. (Full review here)
5. "Bond 50" (Fox) – The best-selling Blu-ray box set of 2012 presents five decades, six James Bonds, and 22 films in this deluxe box set: the complete official James Bond series to date, from "Dr. No" (1962) to "Quantum of Solace" (2009), including the Blu-ray debuts of nine classic Bond films and over 120 hours of bonus features! (This does not include the non-series "Never Say Never Again" or the 1967 Bond spoof "Casino Royale.") It's also the most efficient and logical packaging of the films to date. Though I do with the case include at least the film credits and the supplements on each disc. (Full review here)
Honorable Mentions:
Essential Collection: "Alfred Hitchcock: The Masterpiece Collection" (Universal) offers 15 Hitchcock films, 13 of them in their HD debut. They're not all masterpieces in "The Masterpiece Collection," and there are some issues with a few of the transfers (more later), but as they are all from the Master of Suspense, they all have their merits, and all are packed with supplements carried over from previous DVD releases. (Full review here)
Deluxe Edition: "Singin' in the Rain: Ultimate Collector's Edition" (Warner) is arguably the greatest American musical ever made and certainly one of the most fun. The box set features the newly remastered Blu-ray from a 4k scan of the Technicolor three-strip negatives plus two DVDs, all filled with new and archival supplements. (Full review here)
Classic: "The Big Heat" (Twilight Time) is one of the masterpieces of film noir, a film of subdued style, underplayed brutality, and a well of rage boiling under a surface of calm corruption. Twilight Time has a superb high-definition master from Sony (which released the film on DVD) and the image is sharp and rich, with deep blacks and textured shadows, a reminder of just how beautiful black-and-white can be on a well-mastered, well-produced Blu-ray. (Full review here)
Classic: "The Most Dangerous Game / Gow" (Flicker Alley), shot on the sets of "King Kong" during down time on the production with members of the cast and crew, gives what was in many ways a B-movie the A treatment. This isn't so much a double-feature disc as a single feature well-packed with supplements, and the primary one being the early south seas documentary / travelogue "Gow The Headhunter" (1931), shot in part by Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack. (Full review here)
Cult: The Kino Lorber / Redemption releases of the films of Mario Bava and Jean Rollin – French director Jean Rollin is not a well-known name even to some fans of horror cinema, but his brand of erotic horror with a surreal sensibility has made him a major cult figure among those with a taste for le cinema fantastique. Mario Bava essentially created the genre of baroque horror known as "giallo," a distinctly Italian twist on stalk and kill horror film. Both directors debut on Blu-ray stateside in superb editions in this collaboration. (Full reviews here for Jean Rollin and Mario Bava)
Click here for Videodrone's Best Disc Debuts, Best TV on Disc, and Best MOD Releases and Notable Achievements for 2012
| Tags: | blu-rayWeek in review |
about the blogger

Sean Axmaker is MSN's DVD columnist and the editor of Parallax View. He writes for Turner Classic Movies Online and his work has appeared in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Seattle Weekly, The Stranger, Senses of Cinema, Asian Cult Cinema, Psychotronic Video and "The Scarecrow Video Guide."
movie news
- NYC woman gets probation for stalking actress
- Melissa McCarthy reportedly boots extra from set for mistreating a child
- Bradley Manning sympathetic star of WikiLeaks documentary
- Ryan Gosling breaks Cannes' heart, misses premiere
- 'Hunger Games' star Josh Hutcherson to star in and produce 'Ape'
- Monroe's photos for Prague exhibition stolen
- Bolivia lashes at Sean Penn over jailed American
- Harry Potter book with author notes sold for $228K
- Muppets creator's items head to NYC museum
- Depardieu to play a Chechen man seeking revenge


