Inside Out (English) Full Movie with English Subtitles: Watch Online or Download for Movies
- dreamenspyzaddab
- Aug 19, 2023
- 3 min read
"Inside Out," a comedy-adventure set inside the mind of an 11-year old girl, is the kind of classic that lingers in the mind after you've seen it, sparking personal associations. And if it's as successful as I suspect it will be, it could shake American studio animation out of the doldrums it's been mired in for years. It avoids a lot of the cliched visuals and storytelling beats that make even the best Pixar movies, and a lot of movies by Pixar's competitors, feel too familiar. The best parts of it feel truly new, even as they channel previous animated classics (including the works of Hayao Miyazaki) and explore situations and feelings that everyone has experienced to some degree.
Inside Out (English) full movie with english subtitles download for movies
When Adele sings on her new album, "25," about an emotional experience so vivid that "It was just like a movie / It was just like a song," she's probably thinking of a tune by one of her idols: Roberta Flack, say, or Stevie Nicks. But for fans of this 27-year-old British singer, such a moment could only be captured by one thing: an Adele song. With her big hair and bigger voice, Adele broke out in 2008 as part of the British retro-soul craze that also included Duffy and Amy Winehouse. Her debut album, "19," spawned a hit single in "Chasing Pavements" and led to a Grammy Award for best new artist. Yet she outgrew any style or scene with the smash follow-up, "21," which presented Adele as a great crystallizer of complicated feelings, an artist writing intimately about her own life (in this case about a devastating breakup) in a way that somehow made the music feel universal. Clearly, the pressure is on to duplicate that commercial success with "25," which comes after a long period of public quiet in which Adele recovered from throat surgery and gave birth to a son (and tweeted no more than a few dozen times). "Hello," the record's brooding lead single, set a record when it was released last month, racking up 1.1 million downloads in a week. But the song's enthusiastic embrace only underscored the other, more pressing demand on the singer as she returns: that her music still provide its trademark catharsis. Put another way, Adele's fans have been waiting for years for new Adele songs to explain their experiences to them. And they get a worthy batch on "25." (Mikael Wood) Read more
Video: Sony presents Resident Evil: Vendetta on UHD in an HEVC / H.265 transfer in 2160p framed at 1.78.1 widescreen. The HDR enabled disc, presented with Dolby Vision (which unfortunately my player doesn't support), looks very good even if there isn't a massive difference here between the 4k UHD disc and the included Blu-ray disc (which uses an AVC encoded 1080p transfer, also framed at 1.78.1). As you'd expect for a completely computer generated feature there's not a trace of damage or dirt to find, the image is spotless. There are no noticeable compression artifacts on the UHD at all and some scenes really exhibit some excellent depth (a shot with some candles on a table looks almost 3-D). Black levels are nice and colors are beautifully reproduced here (as you'd expect, this is the area where the UHD most obviously surpasses the Blu-ray disc), and this is in spite of the fact that large portions of the movie take place inside dreary looking labs and underground bunkers and what not. The only noticeable flaws detected during viewing was some minor banding in a few spots and some minor shimmering , but they key word there is minor. So while this isn't a massive leap forward for UHD over Blu-ray, the 4k transfer does offer some noticeable improvements in the areas you'd expect it to.
This disc starts out with an audio commentary featuring director Takanori Tsujimoto, executive producer Takashi Shimizu and writer Makoto Fukami in which the three participants cover the origin of the script, how it ties into other RE storylines, where some of the ideas for the plot came from, some of the technology used in the film and quite a bit more. This gets pretty technical at times but if you want to know more about how and why the movie turned out the way that it did, this is for you. Like most of the extras on this release, it's in Japanese with English subtitles.
2ff7e9595c
Comments