Manchester by the Sea
Indy-pic production values work well in this slice of everyday drama and the inevitable grief in people’s lives. Contrast is good, and colors, like the wide range of blues of the boat and sea in emotionally bonding fishing trips, are subtle but solid. Whites in hospital sheets, doctors’ coats, and the snow Lee shovels are bright, and the rare blacks are deep. Detail is generally good, the doctor’s salt-and-pepper hair well differentiated and textiles having texture, though gloomy night scenes are softer and lack resolution.
The classical orchestral soundtrack stays mainly in the front channels, while the surrounds are kept in reserve for highly emotional moments such as a bar fight when a Ray Charles song flares up all around, or in the main sequence of revelation when the swoon-inducing Albinoni’s Adagio immerses beautifully. The naturalistic Boston-tinged overlapping dialogue is always clear, and cars’ engines sound convincing.
A commentary—consisting of intermittent interview with Lonergan dealing with the evolution of characters and structure of past/present jumping—lacks much insight or information, as does the promotional featurette focusing on the acting. Only the six minutes of deleted scenes add to the experiencing of this already powerful film.
Blu-Ray
Studio: Lionsgate, 2016
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Length: 135 mins.
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Kenneth Lonergan
Starring: Casey Affleck, Michelle Williams, Lucas Hedges
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