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Lots of stuff is still broken, but at least reviews can now be looked up and read.
Goosebumps (Blu-ray) (2015)

Goosebumps (Blu-ray) (2015)

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Released 25-May-2016

Cover Art

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Details At A Glance

General Extras
Category Fantasy Outtakes-Cast Blooper Reel
Additional Footage-Alternate Opening
Deleted Scenes
Featurette-Behind The Scenes-All About Slappy
Featurette-Behind The Scenes-Beginner’s Guide to Surviving a Goosebumps Creature
Featurette-Behind The Scenes-Strange Things Are Happening...On-Set
Featurette-Behind The Scenes-Creaturefied!
Additional Footage-Cast Screen Test Gallery
Rating Rated PG
Year Of Production 2015
Running Time 103:16
RSDL / Flipper Dual Layered Cast & Crew
Start Up Ads Then Menu
Region Coding 2,4 Directed By Rob Letterman
Studio
Distributor
SONY Pictures
Roadshow Home Entertainment
Starring Jack Black
Dylan Minnette
Odeya Rush
Ryan Lee
Amy Ryan
Jillian Bell
Halston Sage
Steven Krueger
Keith Arthur Bolden
Amanda Lund
Case Standard Blu-ray
RPI $29.95 Music Danny Elfman


Video Audio
Pan & Scan/Full Frame None English DTS HD Master Audio 5.1
English Descriptive Audio Dolby Digital 5.1
Widescreen Aspect Ratio 2.40:1
16x9 Enhancement
16x9 Enhanced
Video Format 1080p
Original Aspect Ratio 2.40:1 Miscellaneous
Jacket Pictures No
Subtitles English
English for the Hearing Impaired
Smoking No
Annoying Product Placement No
Action In or After Credits No

NOTE: The Profanity Filter is ON. Turn it off here.

Plot Synopsis

    The Goosebumps brand was tremendously popular in the 1990s, with a string of horror novels by author R.L. Stine that terrified an entire generation of children. There was even a TV show adaptation and a number of computer games, but 2015’s Goosebumps denotes the first time that the brand has extended to the big screen, seeking to appeal to a whole new generation of viewers (whose parents likely grew up with the books). Rather than an omnibus picture or a simple adaptation of a single Stine chiller, the screenplay (by Darren Lemke, based on a story by Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski) is set in the “real” world and features as many monsters and creatures as possible, within a narrative reminiscent of Jumanji and, to some extent, the recent Pixels. Even though it is slightly skewiff around the edges, Goosebumps is downright enjoyable and often charming, which is probably more than most movie-goers were expecting.

    After the death of his father, Zach (Dylan Minnette) moves from New York to a small town in Delaware for a fresh start with mother Gale (Amy Ryan). Zach almost instantly takes a shining to Hannah (Odeya Rush), the cute girl living next door, but a friendship between the pair is strictly forbidden by her reclusive father, R.L. Stine (Jack Black), who goes by the fake name of “Mr. Shivers.” Suspecting that Hannah may be the victim of domestic abuse, Zach and new friend Champ (Ryan Lee) break into Stine’s house where they discover a library of locked “Goosebumps” manuscripts. Before Hannah or Stine have the chance to stop them, the two open one of the manuscripts, unleashing the manifestation of the monster contained within the pages. In the ensuing scuffle, all of Stine’s titles are opened, giving life to dozens of ghoulish creations. To save the town, Zach, Champ, Stine and Hannah work to track down the author’s original typewriter, which is the only thing capable of writing an end to the chaos.

    Tim Burton was slated to produce a Goosebumps feature in the 1990s, following in the shadow of the TV show, but it never came to fruition. Reportedly, many of the narrative broad strokes from Burton’s planned iteration were carried over to this version, which feels more in line with something like Night at the Museum as opposed to Stine’s original works. There are plenty of references to the novels, though, following the heroes as they encounter the Werewolf of Fever Swamp, the Abominable Snowman and the Giant Praying Mantis, but the de facto antagonist of the movie is Slappy (voiced by Black), the evil ventriloquist dummy that may unnerve smaller children. This is a fantasy chase picture at heart, and it does contain some amusing scenes and moments, including a shrewd discussion of Stephen King and mentions of Stine’s sales figures.

    Goosebumps does admittedly suffer from hammy dialogue, some sitcom-worthy gags and a smattering of obvious clichés, not to mention the material is often played quite broadly, lacking in truly meaty scares. This is a PG endeavour which remains suitable for the younger demographic, eschewing any content that’s horrific or shocking, instead leaning on the campy monsters to provide a few mild chills without giving anybody nightmares. Surprisingly, despite being such a high-profile release, digital effects are noticeably below-par, which serves to break the sense of immersion. With the exception of Slappy (who was achieved mostly through clever puppetry), most of the primary monsters were brought to life via some absurdly unconvincing CGI, bringing attention to the tight budget (a mere $58 million) at the least opportune time. Still, director Rob Letterman (2011’s Gulliver’s Travels) otherwise exudes confidence over the material, channelling an old-fashioned matinee vibe and maintaining a taut pace from start to end. Added to this, composer Danny Elfman provides a playful, flavoursome original score that delivers everything we have come to expect from the regular Tim Burton collaborator.

    Black settles on an agreeable tone as Stine, scoring laughs with relative ease. Even better is Jillian Bell (22 Jump Street), a scene-stealer as Zach’s bedazzle-crazy Aunt Lorraine. The film definitely could have used more of the agreeably daffy Bell, who delivers her limited dialogue with plenty of spunk. The younger actors are not quite on the same level as their seasoned co-stars, though, with Ryan Lee in particular growing a tad irksome as the over-the-top Champ. Luckily, Minnette and Rush fare better, and share a sweet on-screen relationship. Flaws notwithstanding, Goosebumps gets more right than wrong. It’s an entertaining, PG-rated fantasy adventure that’s by no means a chore to sit through, and in an age where kids movies are oftentimes unwatchable, this is good enough. The fact that it does have real charm and laughs, and it’s possible to care about the characters on some level, counts for something.

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Transfer Quality

Video

    Goosebumps looks superb on Blu-ray, with a solid AVC-encoded 1080p video presentation that appears to be a direct port of Sony’s well-reviewed Region A release. Roadshow frame the film in its original aspect ratio of 2.39:1, and this is a BD-50, allowing for a healthy bitrate.

    First things first: Goosebumps was a digitally-shot movie, so this Blu-ray transfer does have its inherent limitations, looking a tad flat on the whole. Added to this, there is a certain smoothness to the image since there’s no grain structure, and it doesn’t possess the same “pop” of precise fine detail as other recent productions. Nevertheless, this transfer does look very good, and it’s thankfully free of encoding anomalies - I did not detect any macroblocking, aliasing, banding, or any other unsightly artefacts. This is a smooth encode, aside from minor source-related noise that’s never distracting.

    Clarity and image delineation are exceptional, while the image looks agreeably sharp. Detail is often impressive, revealing textures on clothing and skin, especially throughout medium shots and close-ups. Black levels are above-average during night scenes, and the transfer luckily never falls victim to black crush. Colours are bold and vibrant, and the movie is agreeable with its warm palette as opposed to the over-used contemporary “teal and orange” look.

    All things considered, Goosebumps is a winner from a visual perspective. Only English subtitles are available, and I had no issues reading them.


Video Ratings Summary
Sharpness
Shadow Detail
Colour
Grain/Pixelization
Film-To-Video Artefacts
Film Artefacts
Overall

Audio

    Sony’s Region A Blu-ray release carries a Dolby Atmos mix which downgrades to a Dolby TrueHD 7.1 track, but Roadshow only offers a DTS-HD MA 5.1 track here. It is disappointing that this disc receives inferior audio, especially for the Atmos-compatible consumers out there, but the 5.1 soundtrack is still robust on the whole. This is a loud movie when the monsters appear, and the lossless audio brings out every growl and rumble, accentuating the chaos with appropriate subwoofer activity. Dialogue is well-prioritised and always comprehensible, while Elfman’s score comes through with suitable panache and impact.

    There is panning and deliberate channel usage, and since this is a 5.1 track, it is easy to get immersed in the movie. For those of you who aren’t fussed about Dolby Atmos tracks, Goosebumps sounds terrific on Blu-ray.

Audio Ratings Summary
Dialogue
Audio Sync
Clicks/Pops/Dropouts
Surround Channel Use
Subwoofer
Overall

Extras

    A disappointing selection of supplements, of limited interest.

Cast Blooper Reel (HD; 3:08)

    A standard blooper reel, full of goofing around and even some amusing monster animation. Black is, of course, a total comedic firecracker who visibly enjoyed himself on-set.

Alternate Opening (HD; 3:28)

    Arguably a more fitting opening to the movie (with incomplete visual effects) that does a good job establishing the tone of the story. Worth watching.

Deleted Scenes (HD; 12:39)

    Seven deleted scenes are available to view here, which can either be viewed individually or via a “Play All” function. None of the scenes are exactly vital. Here’s what we have:

All About Slappy (HD; 4:44)

    As the title implies, this is a short featurette solely concerned with Slappy. R.L. Stine talks about his liking for the character, and there’s a brief behind-the-scenes examination of what it took to bring the dummy to life on-screen.

Beginner’s Guide to Surviving a Goosebumps Creature (HD; 5:47)

    A fluffy, very child-pandering extra featuring Zach and Champ who talk about the creatures in the film and how to defeat them. If you’re expecting a substantive look at the making of the movie, you’ll be disappointed.

Strange Things Are Happening...On-Set (HD; 3:30)

    Another fluffy, tongue-in-cheek clip featuring Minnette who talks about weird occurrences behind the scenes. This is clearly geared more towards children.

Creaturefied! (HD; 8:56)

    If you can get past the fact that this extra is clearly aimed at kids who are encouraged to try creating monsters themselves, this is a relatively enjoyable featurette about the film’s make-up effects.

Cast Screen Test Gallery (HD; 7:16)

    Four screen test clips involving Black, Minnette and Rush.

R4 vs R1

NOTE: To view non-R4 releases, your equipment needs to be multi-zone compatible and usually also NTSC compatible.

    Sony's Release A release is identical to Roadshow's disc in terms of extras. However, the Sony disc possesses a Dolby Atmos track, giving it the edge. Slight winner for Region A, but the audio might not be much of a big deal to casual viewers.

Summary

    I grew up with Goosebumps, having read the novels, played the video games, watched the TV show and collected a lot of branded merchandise. Even though this movie adaptation has its issues, it's a charming movie on the whole that's worth checking out. A sequel is apparently in the works, which sounds enticing to me.

    Roadshow's Blu-ray release features a strong presentation but very little in the way of quality extras. Worth buying, but only at sale price.

Ratings (out of 5)

Video
Audio
Extras
Plot
Overall

© Callum Knox (I studied biology)
Tuesday, June 14, 2016
Review Equipment
DVDPlayStation 4, using HDMI output
DisplayLG 42LW6500. This display device has not been calibrated. This display device is 16x9 capable. This display device has a maximum native resolution of 1080p.
Audio DecoderBuilt in to amplifier/receiver. This audio decoder/receiver has not been calibrated.
AmplificationLG BH7520TW
SpeakersLG Tall Boy speakers, 5.1 set-up, 180W

Other Reviews NONE