A Hard Day’s Night
The Criterion transfer, struck from a Lester-approved 4K restoration of the original 35mm negative, looks terrific: crisp detail, clear contrasts, palpable textures. Some scenes are a bit washed out or faded, but much of this was filmed on the fly and, hey, it’s 50 years old. Still, I’m sure it hasn’t looked any better since I saw it so long ago. The sound is better still: the mono soundtrack diligently restored, then remastered in stereo and 5.1 surround by Giles Martin (George’s son) and Sam Okell at Abbey Road Studios. I have an aesthetic preference for the mono, but the 5.1 is about as stunning as I’ve heard pop music in simulated surround.
The extras are right up there with Criterion’s finest: three making-of featurettes, an audio commentary track composed of other archive material, some illuminating context from biographer Mark Lewisohn, a shrewd analysis of the film’s editing, some early (and very weird) Lester shorts, and an 80-page booklet with photos, an informed essay, and a lengthy 1970 interview with Lester.
This is a no-brainer: Buy it.
Blu-Ray
Studio: Criterion Collection, 1964
Aspect Ratio: 1.75:1, black & white
Audio Format: Uncompressed mono, stereo, DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Length: 87 mins.
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Director: Richard Lester
Starring: The Beatles, Wilfrid Brambell, Norman Rossington
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