Region: 1 (USA, Canada and US territories)
Rating:
Label: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
Studio: Walt Disney Video
DVD Format: Keep Case, Widescreen Anamorphic, 1.85:1, Closed Captioned, Color, Sides:1 (SS-RSDL)
DVD Features: Subtitles: English, Audio Track 1: English, Dolby Digital 5.1, Audio Track 2: French, Dolby Digital 5.1
Making-Of Documentary
Deleted Scenes and Extended Ending
Storyboard to Film Comparisons
Interview with director M. Night Shyamalan
Music and Sound design
Reaching the Audience & Rules and Clues
Michel Hafner (5 April 2000):
This DVD edition of 1999's surprise blockbuster _Sixth Sense, The (1999)_ is not quite state of the art throughout, but very watchable nonetheless.
The film element used is clean and image steadiness is good except for one jump in chapter 2 at 3:34. Contrast and color rendition are first rate with deep blacks, good shadow detail and highly saturated colors where needed (such as the symbolically used intense reds). Sharpness is uneven but mostly good or very good, solid average for a new anamorphic transfer. The noise and grain level is low and never distracting. I have not seen distracting video artifacts as well.
The weakest aspect of this DVD is the compression which could and definitely should be better. The average bit rate is around 5 MBit/s and that is not enough for some scenes. Most have no distracting problems, but some do: I-frame pulsing, macro blocking and also floating texture parts. A good example is in chapter 11 where Bruce Willis sits next to a sofa with a yellow pillow on the left. The textures of the pillow and the sofa are full of macroblocking artifacts and pulsate rhytmically (I-frame pulsing). Why? Because the supplements use too many bits? Because the MPEG encoder used does not like that type of scene? Only the expert knows. What I know is that it's a pity and should not happen with a DVD of a major film as this one. Can we have high bit rate DTS version, please?
The supplements have good image quality (except the deleted scenes which are low resolution) and the various trailers are better looking than the average trailer as well. The menu design is appropriately spooky.
Overall this is a very nice DVD. The compression problems are a minus point and should be fixed in any new versions, but are likely to be no major problem unless you watch the DVD on a big and very bright screen.
Region: 1 (USA, Canada and US territories)
Label: Walt Disney Home Video
Studio: Walt Disney Video
DVD Format: Custom, Widescreen Anamorphic, 1.85:1, Closed Captioned, Color, Sides:1 (SS-DL)
DVD Features: Subtitles: Spanish, Audio Track 1: English, DTS, Audio Track 2: English, Dolby Digital 5.1, Audio Track 3: French, Unknown
Reflections From The Set - New Feature
Documentary On The Paranormal Hosted By M. Night Shyamalan - New Feature
Moving Pictures: The Storyboard Process - New Feature
Collectible Storyboard Sequence
From the original DVD:
Deleted Scenes and Extended Ending
Music and Sound design
Publicity
Reaching the Audience & Rules and Clues
Studio: Walt Disney Video
Studio: Walt Disney Video
Region: 2 (Western Europe, Japan, South Africa, Middle East, Egypt)
Label: Buena Vista Home Entertainment
DVD Format: Snap Case, 1.85:1, Color, Sides:1 (SS-DL)
DVD Features: Subtitles: English, French, Italian, Audio Track 1: English, Dolby Digital 5.1, Audio Track 2: Italian, Dolby Digital 5.1
Storyboard to film comparison, The Cast, Music and Sound Design
Reaching the Audience, Rules and Clues, Deleted Scenes
A Conversation with M. Night Shyamalan, Publicity
Region: 2 (Western Europe, Japan, South Africa, Middle East, Egypt)
DVD Format: Snap Case, Widescreen Anamorphic, Pan & Scan , 1.85:1, Closed Captioned, Color, Sides:1 (SS-DL)
DVD Features: Subtitles: English, French, Audio Track 1: French, Dolby Digital 5.1, Audio Track 2: English, Dolby Digital 5.1
La comparaison entre le storyboard et le film
La distribution
Musique et bande annonce
Atteindre le public
Les scènes supprimées
La conversation avec M. Night Shyamalan
la bande annonce cinéma
Les spots T.V
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