A Film I Didn’t Appreciate Until I Watched It on Blu-ray: Black Hawk Down
I vaguely remember buying Black Hawk Down on DVD not long after it was released. I was interested in it, I watched it all the way through, but I wasn’t blown away by it, pardon the pun. It felt intense, sure, but it didn’t leave a lasting impression. At the time, I couldn’t quite understand why, given how highly regarded the film already was. I’ve had this experience with a few war films over the years, where the format quietly undermined the impact rather than the film itself , something I touched on in my post 5 Modern War Films You Must See for Intense, Gritty Viewing has some fine examples. Looking back now, the reason for my original view is obvious. I was watching it on a 32-inch TV , using built-in speakers , on a DVD . Why It Fell Flat the First Time This is not a subtle film. It’s built on scale, chaos, overlapping sound, confusion, and sustained tension. That kind of experience depends heavily on presentation, and my setup simply couldn’t deliver it. On DVD...