United States United States United Kingdom Canada Germany France South Korea
USERNAME
PASSWORD
 |  New member  |  Lost password

Home   News   Movies   Players   Recorders   Drives   Media   Firmware   Community   Forum   Deals


Most Popular Blu-ray Deals at Amazon

Show latest price drops  
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (Blu-ray)
$12.00
Man on Fire (Blu-ray)
$12.00
I, Robot (Blu-ray)
$10.00
Léon: The Professional (Blu-ray)
$12.99
Die Hard (Blu-ray)
$10.00
Iron Man (Blu-ray)
$19.49

Kingdom of Heaven (Blu-ray)
$12.00
Star Trek (Blu-ray)
$16.99

Snatch (Blu-ray)
$12.99

2001: A Space Odyssey (Blu-ray)
$7.99

The Express (Blu-ray)
$7.49

A Serious Man (Blu-ray)
$19.49

Law Abiding Citizen (Blu-ray)
$19.99

Serenity (Blu-ray)
$12.99

Dark City (Blu-ray)
$7.99


Deals


 New deals
 Top deals
 Big price drops


Reviews


 New reviews
 Browse reviews

Release lists


 Now available
 New releases
 Coming soon
 Recently listed
 New pre-orders
 New covers

Top lists


 Top rated
 Top sellers
 Top pre-orders

Search


 Browse movies
 Search movies
 Search reviews
 Search cast & crew

By genre


 Action (2867)
 Adventure (1806)
 Animation (497)
 Anime (210)
 Biography (266)
 Comedy (1968)
 Crime (1411)
 Documentary (604)
 Drama (3672)
 Family (772)
 Fantasy (1164)
 Film-Noir (18)
 History (332)
 Horror (1036)
 Music (1030)
 Musical (241)
 Mystery (706)
 Nature (161)
 Other (202)
 Romance (1214)
 Sci-Fi (1250)
 Short (73)
 Sport (275)
 Television (630)
 Thriller (2867)
 War (429)
 Western (126)

By studio


 20th Century Fox
 Disney / Buena Vista
 DreamWorks
 Lionsgate Films
 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
 New Line Cinema
 Paramount Pictures
 Sony Pictures
 Universal Studios
 Warner Bros.
 Weinstein Company


About


 Blu-ray movies
 Supporting studios

Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels Blu-ray

United States

Universal Studios | 1999 | 108 mins | Rated R | Dec 01, 2009



Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels (Blu-ray)
Large: Front




Video


Video codec: VC-1
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1

Audio


English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Spanish: DTS 5.1
French: DTS 5.1
German: DTS 5.1

Subtitles


English SDH, French, Spanish, Dutch, German

Disc


50GB Blu-ray Disc
BD-Live
D-Box

Price


List price: $26.98 
Amazon: $17.99 (Save 33%)
Third party: $16.99 (Save 37%)
Usually ships in 24 hours

Buy Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels on Blu-ray

Blu-ray review


Movie 4.0 of 5 4.0
Video 2.5 of 5 2.5
Audio 3.5 of 5 3.5
Extras 1.0 of 5 1.0
Overall 2.5 of 5 2.5

Playback


Region free
Summary Blu-ray review Screenshots (20) User reviews (2) Region coding News Forum

Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels Blu-ray Review


Ritchie's entertaining, foul-mouthed heist flick earns a mediocre Blu-ray release...


Reviewed by Kenneth Brown, November 28, 2009

Before Swept Away, Revolver, and a soul-sapping relationship with Madonna left fans and critics wondering if acclaimed British filmmaker Guy Ritchie had gone mad; before Snatch briefly granted him access to Hollywood's inner sanctum and Brad Pitt's heart (arguably one and the same); and long before RocknRolla signaled his welcome return to his cinematic roots, there was Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels. Like Quentin Tarantino did with Reservoir Dogs some six years earlier, Ritchie designed his first feature to shatter expectations and challenge genre convention, leaning on sharp, double-edged dialogue and increasingly complex conflict to test his enterprising misfits' acid-tongued mettle. While the resulting film is a bit more superficial than substantial -- and, in retrospect, isn't quite the revelation it was ten years ago -- it's difficult to deny its lasting appeal. Ritchie not only succeeded as a filmmaker, nabbing accolades and awards, his debut rightfully won him the devotion of cinephiles the world over.



Lock and load, boys... lock and load.


Compressing the plot of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels into a single paragraph (or for that matter as many as six) is a laughable undertaking fraught with peril. But duty calls. When lifelong friends Tom (Jason Flemyng), Bacon (Jason Statham), Eddie (Nick Moran), and Soap (Dexter Fletcher) are given one week to pay a ludicrous sum of money to a ruthless crime lord dubbed Hatchet Harry (P. H. Moriarty), they decide to steal the money from their neighbors, a group of thieves plotting a harrowing heist of their own. Naturally, little goes as planned as the foursome are soon forced to deal with a hard-edged debt collector (the indomitable Vinnie Jones) and his young son (Peter McNicholl), a vicious kingpin (Vas Blackwood), Harry's bodyguard and close friend (Lenny McLean), a weapons dealer (Stephen Marcus) who inadvertently gives Tom and his cohorts a pair of antique shotguns meant for Harry's personal collection, and a steady parade of rival crooks and miscreants. It all comes to a head as anyone and everyone on screen draws a gun, leaving our bumbling protagonists to wonder what, if anything, they could have done differently to avoid such turmoil.

Confused? Don't fret, dear readers. Despite a seemingly endless array of sociopaths and villains, despite countless subplots and tangents (most of which conveniently converge midway through the second act), Ritchie's film is surprisingly streamlined. It only takes a half an hour or so to meet the entire cast of characters, and only a half hour more to get a handle on the many facets of the story. As he would do with Snatch two years later, Ritchie produces such memorable personalities and crosses their streams with such effortless ease that the rest of his script practically writes itself. Sure, it essentially boils down to a forty-minute Mexican standoff -- one that consists of at least a dozen temperamental players -- but the sheer joy the director injects into his epic showdown is worth the price of admission alone. Death is fused with hilarity, gunfire is laced with wit, and conversations are loaded with precision barbs and intelligent diatribes. While greed and desperation are at the forefront of the tale, it's Ritchie's sick sense of humor that prevails, elevating Lock, Stock and its cutthroat criminals to a higher plateau inspired by, but independent from, the work of Tarantino and his disciples. Finesse isn't a word often associated with Ritchie's breed of stylized, madcap genre pic, but the director brings a welcome assuredness to the production, a finesse if you will; the sort of confidence I'd expect from a more seasoned filmmaker, not a man helming his first major production.

If Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels suffers, it's in the wake of Snatch. Years after their inception, Ritchie's first film plays like a glorified casting reel for his superior sophomore effort. Everything from his stark cinematography to his winding narrative, his pulpy dialogue to his at-times cartoonish characters, his sudden quick-cuts to his penchant for slow-motion show-stoppers are on full display, albeit in early stages of their development. It certainly doesn't detract from the impact of the film, but it is a slight distraction, particularly when Ritchie goes too far, indulging his actors with lingering close-ups and static shots the director would later refine for Statham, Pitt, and the cast of Snatch. As a result, the film isn't nearly as fresh as it was a decade ago. Maybe I'm jaded after so many viewings, but other filmmakers have done more with less. While Ritchie undoubtedly deserves credit for his part in paving their way, Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels hasn't aged as well as I hoped it would. Ah well, none of that should prevent anyone from sampling this perverse, blood-soaked British delicacy. I had a great time reacquainting myself with Tom, Bacon, Eddie, and Soap, and look forward to the next opportunity I have to soak up their criminal misadventures all over again.


Video

  2.5 of 5


Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels has never been an attractive film -- part of its charm lies in the grit and grime of its sepia-toned, neo-noir visuals -- but Universal's 1080p/VC-1 transfer is an unrepentant mess. Yes, compared to its decidedly dated DVD counterpart, colors are more stable and vibrant, black levels are much deeper, and detail is more refined and revealing. Unfortunately, overzealous artificial sharpening results in a number of issues. Frequent aliasing, ringing, serrated edges, and aggressive bursts of razor-sharp grain undermine the integrity of the transfer, cursing the presentation with an unnatural, digitized haze that robs the image of what could presumably be a convincing filmic appearance. It doesn't help that smudged textures and softness are more pronounced, specks and scratches pepper the proceedings, and contrast is pushed to such an extreme that clarity, skintones, and delineation take significant hits. As for the proficiency of the transfer itself, crush is a consistent issue, but artifacting and banding are kept to a minimum; grain spikes and lulls as it always has, but obvious smearing leaves me to believe DNR has been used on many sequences. That being said, it's tough to tell where Ritchie's production limitations end and Universal's fugly transfer begins. Desperate DVD owners will be somewhat pleased with any upgrade, even an inherent one, but newcomers and videophiles will be far less forgiving. Brace yourselves, gents.


Audio

  3.5 of 5


Universal's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 surround track represents a substantial step up from the standard mixes that have preceded it, but isn't nearly as polished or powerful as I had hoped. While gunshots pack the requisite lossless kick and LFE output is heartier and more robust than ever before, rear speaker activity is spotty, voices are occasionally swallowed by ensuing chaos, and normalization issues abound. Unreliable dynamics age Lock, Stock by an extra five years as well, leaving the film at the mercy of its relatively limited budget and its director's showmanship. Thankfully, the majority of Ritchie's rat-a-tat-tat dialogue is intelligible and well-prioritized, the satisfying kick-kack of automatic weapon fire lends intensity to several standout scenes, and some much-needed directional realism makes the overall experience moderately immersive. Is there room for improvement? Definitely. A complete overhaul could eliminate additional issues (like a faint hiss that periodically graces the soundscape) and smooth out some of the film's stockier pans (among other minor mishaps). Even so, Lock, Stock diehards will find Universal's DTS-HD MA track to be more than adequate.


Supplements

  1 of 5


Aside from Universal's now-standard features -- My Scenes bookmarking, BD-Live functionality, an interactive news ticker, and D-BOX support -- the Blu-ray edition of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels only includes two supplements: a short but satisfying behind-the-scenes featurette called "One Smoking Camera" (SD, 11 minutes) and a montage of F-bombs called "Lock, Stock and Two F**cking Barrels" (SD, 2 minutes).


Final words

  2.5 of 5


Though a lesser film than Snatch, Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels is nevertheless an entertaining precursor worthy of its Cockney-cult following. With searing dialogue and a rapidfire script that propels its twisted tale along, Ritchie's first foray into fame is fierce and funny. The Blu-ray edition is less successful, primarily due to its problematic video transfer, but also because its DTS-HD Master Audio track isn't all it could be and its supplemental package is a complete wash. While a considerable improvement from the previously released DVD, frugal fans will want to wait to pick this one up when it's on sale.

Buy Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels on Blu-ray

Back to Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels Blu-ray »


If you enjoyed the Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels Blu-ray Review and would like to support us so we can add even more reviews, please use our links to buy Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels Blu-ray and other titles from Amazon.

If you would like to read reviews of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels Blu-ray written by other members, or post your own review, check out the user reviews section for this title.

Latest Deals United States



The latest deals
on Blu-ray movies
at Amazon.

Show new deals »



Best Deals

 United States

The hottest deals
on Blu-ray movies.
Save up to 77%.

Show top deals »



Big Price Drops United States



The biggest price drops on Blu-ray movies at Amazon.

Show price drops »



Toy Story 1 & 2

 United States


 

$79.98  $39.98
Pre-order now!



The Lord of the Rings

 United States




$99.98  $64.99
Pre-order now!



Law Abiding Citizen

 United States




$39.98  $19.99
Pre-order now!



  

Top Sellers

  United States

1.  Zombieland

2.  The Twilight Saga: New Moon

3.  Star Trek

4.  Inglourious Basterds (Special Edition)

5.  Michael Jackson's This is It

6.  The Hurt Locker

7.  Couples Retreat

8.  2001: A Space Odyssey

9.  A Serious Man

10.  Up

  » See more top sellers



  

Top Pre-orders

  United States

1.  The Twilight Saga: New Moon

2.  Law Abiding Citizen

3.  2012 (Two-disc Special Edition)

4.  Toy Story

5.  Toy Story 2

6.  The Princess and the Frog (Three-disc Edition)

7.  Saving Private Ryan

8.  Dune

9.  Minority Report

10.  Where the Wild Things Are

  » See more pre-orders



  

Top Bargains

  United States

1.  Star Trek
$16.99, Save 58%

2.  Inglourious Basterds (Special Edition)
$16.99, Save 58%

3.  2001: A Space Odyssey
$7.99, Save 72%

4.  A Serious Man
$19.49, Save 47%

5.  Up
$19.99, Save 57%

6.  Batman Begins
$9.99, Save 66%

7.  Iron Man (Ultimate Edition)
$19.49, Save 51%

8.  The Hangover
$19.96, Save 45%

9.  Dark City (Director's Cut)
$7.99, Save 72%

10.  The Dark Knight
$14.99, Save 58%

  » See more bargains





This web site is not affiliated with the Blu-ray Disc Association.
All trademarks are the property of the respective trademark owners.
© 2002-2010 Blu-ray.com. All rights reserved.
Registration problems | Business Inquiries | Legal Notices