Black Dog Blu-ray offers decent video and solid audio, but overall it's a mediocre Blu-ray release
An ex-con takes a job driving a truck cross country. What he doesn't know is that the truck is filled with illegal weapons and now he must fight to survive and save his family.
For more about Black Dog and the Black Dog Blu-ray release, see Black Dog Blu-ray Review published by Martin Liebman on July 12, 2016 where this Blu-ray release scored 2.5 out of 5.
Trucking can be a lonely business, long trips away from loved ones and home for a hard life on the road. But at the same time, there's almost
something glamorous about it, about the freedom, the escape, the opportunity to see and hear the world away from the bubble of home and
experience a different side of the same coin. However one sees it, trucking usually isn't fraught with danger. At least not the kind that involves people
trying to kill the driver. Director Kevin Hooks' (Fled, Passenger 57) 1998 film Black Dog tells the tale of a
down-on-his-luck trucker with an opportunity to cash in, not knowing the dangers to follow on his bumper. As Hooks' Passenger 57 takes
action to
the skies, his Black Dog brings it back to the ground for a rather exciting and enjoyable, if not narratively simple, story of big rigs, big
explosions, and big danger in one of
the few pictures to make the world of long distance trucking the center of a relatively big film.
On the road again.
Jack Crews (Patrick Swayze) used to be one of the best truck drivers in the business. That was before an accident led to the loss of his license and
prison time. Now, he's working hard just to make ends meet, to take care of his wife Melanie (Brenda Strong) and his daughter Tracy (Erin
Broderick). At work, he's offered the opportunity to drive a rig, deliver an off-the-books load, and collect $10,000 for his work. He refuses, but
when he learns that the family's home is facing foreclosure, he acts against his better judgment and takes the job. He rides with an aspiring
songwriter named Earl (Randy Travis) and is tailed by Sonny (Gabriel Casseus) and Wes (Brian Vincent), all providing extra cover for, and a few
extra
eyes on, the load. But
they quickly come under fire, not to mention FBI and ATF surveillance. Turns out Crews is hauling a load of illegal weapons, and the men who want
them will do anything -- including threaten his family -- to make sure they get them.
At Black Dog's dramatic core is a paint-by-numbers story that's been played out a million times before: a family man on the verge of losing
it
all
risks everything to save all that he loves. Emotional investment is therefore practically zero, because a movie like Black Dog is always risk
averse. Audiences know what they're going to get going in or, at least, once the film lays its hand on the table. Yet Swayze manages to draw out
just
enough legitimacy in the lead part, opening his heart and soul just wide enough to invite the audience in, anyway, and thereby increase the sense
of
peril
and immediacy so that there's enough dramatic undercurrent to raise the stakes in the movie's action scenes. The late leading man finds
just the right gear during the film's action scenes, too, pulling off a believable veteran trucker who knows what he's doing behind the wheel.
Swayze is
the reason movie works as well as it does, shifting up behind the middle-of-the-road pack and pulling into the fast lane that's reserved for the more
enjoyable Action movies of the late 1990s.
Black Dog's action scenes are rather impressive, too. The film's technical construction relies on practical effects, resulting in a high yield,
tangible,
weighty, relatable sense of danger. Trucks push through the world, and oftentimes one another, with plenty of obvious tonnage that ups the ante
considerably. Though a bit slower and a whole lot bulkier than fast sports cars, the film's truck chases make for a welcome change of pace from
the usual high speed
car chases that, no matter how well done, or from what era, rarely feel unique. Black Dog, however, proves honestly engaging, thanks to
simple but effective cinematography and smartly choreographed on-road action. Swayze once again commands during the action, doing most of his
damage behind the wheel -- and believably so -- but also during a few scenes with boots on the ground where his fist, not his right foot, do the
work.
Black Dog rolls onto Blu-ray with a fair, but flawed, 1080p transfer. Beyond the occasional -- more rare, really -- pop, spot, and speckle is
what appears to be mild noise reduction. The image, and faces in particular, appear a bit smoother and more plastic-y than they should. Details
don't suffer too terribly much, though. Facial pores and lines are still adequately complex, ditto clothing fabrics and seams. The inside of the truck has
plenty on tap, including dusty and worn down buttons, knobs, gauges, gears, and displays. Colors fare well. Red's red shirt pushes a little too hard
early on,
and the shirt appears a bit overpowering as a result. General color balance, however, between attire, natural greens, different color cars, and
the like never appear mishandled. Black levels are fine and flesh tones don't appear to stray too far from normal. The apparent noise reduction isn't
anywhere as atrocious as it was on some of Universal's early catalogue releases, but it still appears to be an issue here. Outside of that, the transfer is
largely good to go for a midlevel movie plopped onto a nuts-and-bolts catalogue release.
Black Dog's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack fares a little better than the video. Action scenes are suitably robust, a little crude,
rough around the edges, and lacking truly in-depth clarity, but the rawness of truck crashes, twisted metal, and explosions adds a certain charm to the
proceedings. Action scenes represent the bulk of surround and subwoofer usage, at least beyond the opening titles where some zips and zooms
and whooshes maneuver all through the stage. Music is clear and well spaced along the front. The back channels chime in on support but don't carry a
full load. Dialogue is rather clear, but occasionally shallow, lacking even balance even at reference volume.
All that's included is the Black Dog theatrical trailer (480i, 2:04). No top men is included. The trailer, audio and subtitle options, and scene
selections are only available in-film via the pop-up menu.
Black Dog doesn't reinvent the (18) wheel(er), but it does offer a fresh new take on vehicle-based Action. Swayze is excellent, carrying the
movie above
both its predictable and stale dramatic current and its heavy duty trucking action scenes. It's a fun movie, very fast paced and lean, a joy to watch and
one of the better quick-run time killer Action flicks out there. Universal's Blu-ray is practically featureless, and video and audio aren't pristine, but the
movie itself is definitely worth owning. Recommended.
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Universal Studios Home Entertainment has announced that it will release on Blu-ray Kevin Hooks' action thriller Black Dog (1998), starring Patrick Swayze, Meat Loaf, Randy Travis, Gabriel Casseus, and Brian Kelly. The release will be available for purchase on ...