Honeymoon Blu-ray (original) (raw)

Magnolia Pictures | 2014 | 87 min | Rated R | Jan 13, 2015

| | | VideoCodec: MPEG-4 AVC (21.99 Mbps)Resolution: 1080pAspect ratio: 1.85:1Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1 AudioEnglish: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit) English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit) (less) Subtitles English SDH, French, Spanish English SDH, French, Spanish (less) DiscsBlu-ray DiscSingle disc (1 BD-25)BD-Live Playback2K Blu-ray: Region A (B, C untested) | | PriceList price: $8.49 Not currently available,check back for updates More Info PriceBuy on:We may earn a commission from purchases made using our links. Thanks for your supportMovie rating 102 ratings. **38%**popularity | | - | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |

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Honeymoon

(2014)

Honeymoon Blu-ray delivers great video and audio in this excellent Blu-ray release

Young newlyweds Paul and Bea travel to remote lake country for their honeymoon. Shortly after arriving, Paul finds Bea wandering and disoriented in the middle of the night. As she becomes more distant and her behavior increasingly peculiar, Paul begins to suspect something more sinister than sleepwalking took place in the woods.

For more about Honeymoon and the Honeymoon Blu-ray release, see Honeymoon Blu-ray Review published by Michael Reuben on December 31, 2014 where this Blu-ray release scored 4.0 out of 5.

Director: Leigh Janiak
Writers: Phil Graziadei

, Leigh Janiak
Starring: Rose Leslie, Harry Treadaway, Ben Huber, Hanna Brown, Bob Harrison, John Lauterbach
Producer: Patrick Baker

» See full cast & crew

Honeymoon Blu-ray Review

Everything Changes After "I Do"

Reviewed by Michael Reuben, December 31, 2014

The mainstreaming of horror films has made them a popular point of entry for fledgling filmmakers looking for their start. When writer/director Leigh Janiak and her NYU Film School classmate and writing partner, Phil Graziadei, tired of submitting scripts to studios and decided to write something they could make independently, they borrowed the core of a classic horror tale, then stripped it down to bare essentials so that it could be told with just a few actors and one location.

Which classic story did they choose? You don't want to know. One of the most interesting tricks in Honeymoon is how long Janiak and Graziadei manage to sustain the uncertainty about what is happening to the film's newlyweds, even for savvy viewers who have seen it all. It doesn't hurt that Janiak brings a subtle but distinctive female perspective to the film that you're not really aware of until you reflect back on some of her choices. The sexual dynamism connoted by the title infuses all of Honeymoon, but Janiak expresses it in her own unique way.

The newly married couple we see in a personal wedding video at the film's opening are Bea and Paul (Rose Leslie from Downton Abbey and Game of Thrones, and Harry Treadaway, who plays Victor Frankenstein on Penny Dreadful). Very little specific background is provided about them, but it's clear that they wed on a shoestring and are honeymooning at a remote country cabin in Canada owned by Bea's family, because that's all they can afford. Bea spent her summers there as a child, but Paul knows the place only from Bea's stories. The pair are adorably upbeat and thoroughly absorbed in each other, as only young newlyweds can be. One doesn't have to be too much older and more experienced to recognize that the euphoria of being newly married will shortly give way to the practical demands of building a life together.

Indeed, Bea may already be worrying about the future. An offhand reference by Paul to his wife's "womb" triggers an unexpectedly tense reaction, as if Bea were already preparing to argue with her new husband about when to have children. (Paul retreats immediately.) A more troubling incident occurs when the couple strolls out to the sole restaurant in this remote area and discovers that it is now run by Will (Ben Huber), an old boyfriend of Bea, and his oddly remote wife, Annie (Hanna Brown). Will seems both pleased to see Bea and eager to shoo her away (perhaps because the presence of both their spouses makes their reunion somewhat awkward).

Soon Paul has even stranger things to worry about. In the middle of the night, he discovers that Bea has left the cabin. When he finds her in the woods, she is naked and shivering and claims not to recall how she got there. Then she begins to invent less-than-credible excuses not to have sex with her new husband, making Paul wonder whether Bea has started seeing Will again. She also has odd marks on her inner thighs, which Bea claims are bug bites, but Paul suspects otherwise. Whenever Paul questions his new wife, she accuses him of ruining their honeymoon.

At the core of Honeymoon is an almost universal unease that, consciously or not, afflicts almost anyone considering a long-term relationship. Do I really know this person? What if we throw in our lots together, and only then do I discover that he or she is someone other than I thought? Leslie and Treadaway give impressive performances as they chart the gradual disintegration of the trust between Bea and Paul, with Paul desperately wanting to believe Bea's reassurances but unable to ignore the mounting evidence that something is radically wrong, and Bea just as desperately trying to maintain a veneer of normalcy, even as it becomes more and more obvious that she's keeping secrets.

When director Janiak finally unveils the underlying cause of the couple's woes, the reveal feels less important than the loss of the sweetly innocent romance we first saw in the wedding video. One of the horror genre's most common weaknesses is that characters are treated as cannon fodder; they exist to be victims of whatever evil force is the story's raison d'�tre. But by paring this genre story to its core, Janiak and her writing partner have achieved the opposite effect.Honeymoon's two main characters overshadow the evil that attacks them, and it's Bea and Paul who leave the most lasting impression after the credits roll, even if the impression isn't a very happy one. Janiak has said that she wanted to create a sense of "contamination creeping into every scene, a slow-rotting, spoiling sensation. When you're walking home from the theatre with a friend, when you climb into bed next to your partner, hopefully there's a nagging:�Who is this person next to me?" Job well done.

Honeymoon Blu-ray, Video Quality

4.0 of 5

Honeymoon is the first feature film shot by Kyle Klutz, an up-and-coming cinematographer in horror cinema with numerous shorts to his credit. According to IMDb, Klutz used the Arri Alexa, which is consistent with the look of the film. Post-production was completed on a digital intermediate, from which Magnolia Home Entertainment's 1080p, AVC-encoded Blu-ray was presumably sourced.

The Blu-ray image has the sharpness and clarity of digital photography without any of its harshness. The color palette is muted and understated without the overly darkened look that sometimes afflicts DI-adjusted filmmaking when directors and DPs are trying to establish a mood. Klutz and director Janiak use nighttime effectively, with solid blacks obscuring portions of the frame where something terrible may be lurking, but they also make sure that what you're supposed to see is clearly illuminated. Daytime scenes don't have their colors brightened or specific elements "popped" out of the frame, because that would cut against the notion that this is an ordinary couple making the best of their situation at a family-owned cabin. The actors, who can look suitably glamorous with appropriate hair and makeup (as they do in their interview for the extras), have been made up and photographed to look like everyday people, not movie stars.

Perhaps the most distinctive and brightest scenes are those on the lake where Bea and Paul go canoeing and fishing. It turns out to be a key locale.

Magnolia has placed the 87-minute film on a BD-25, which, with the HD extras, permits an average bitrate of 21.99 Mbps. Given the material's digital origination and the lack of any major action, it's an acceptable rate, and artifacts were not an issue.

Honeymoon Blu-ray, Audio Quality

4.0 of 5

Probably the most critical element of Honeymoon's 5.1 soundtrack, encoded on Blu-ray in lossless DTS-HD MA, is the artfully suggestive score by Heather McIntosh (Compliance), who uses everything from basic piano notes to waves of synthesized harmonics to enhance the drama and contribute to the story's discomfort. The sonic design contains basic environmental elements such as nighttime forest sounds, whirring insects and the splashing of waves from the nearby lake. There are also loud flashes and buzzes from ancient electrical systems that keep shorting out (or maybe someone is interfering with them�we're supposed to wonder). Dialogue is generally clear and distinct, except when Bea and Paul encounter the mysterious Bill, and then the conversation between Bea and her old pal is deliberately difficult to understand, because they speak in a mixture of English and (unsubtitled) French. It's like a private language, and it excludes the audience as much as it excludes Bea's new husband.

Honeymoon Blu-ray, Special Features and Extras

3.0 of 5

Honeymoon Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation

4.0 of 5

Honeymoon shouldn't be oversold. It's a small, character-driven movie, and anyone expecting big effects and operatic villains should look elsewhere. Horror has always been most effective when it's intimate and personal. The genre was created by a 19th Century female author, Mary Shelley, who transformed her experience of miscarriage into a tale of a male scientist seeking to create life by reanimating dead tissue, only to realize he had created his own destroyer. Janiak's creative instincts clearly tend back to that wellspring, in which the things we care about most also pose us the greatest danger. Magnolia's Blu-ray is a fine presentation; so, as long as the film is approached with the right expectations, it comes highly recommended.

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Honeymoon Blu-ray, News and Updates

Magnolia to Release The Two Faces of January and Honeymoon on Blu...

- December 4, 2014

Magnolia Home Entertainment has officially announced that it will release on Blu-ray Hossein Amini's directorial debut The Two Faces of January (2014), starring Kirsten Dunst, Viggo Mortensen, Oscar Isaac, and Daisy Bevan, and Leigh Janiak's film Honeymoon (2014), ...

Honeymoon Blu-ray - October 10, 2014

Arrow Films have officially announced that they will release on Blu-ray Leigh Janiak's horror film Honeymoon (2014), starring Rose Leslie, Harry Treadaway, Ben Huber, and Hanna Brown. The release will be available for purchase on January 19th.

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