The Hindenburg Blu-ray offers solid video and decent audio, but overall it's a mediocre Blu-ray release
A colonel is assigned by the German government to prevent any plans of sabotage, during the Hindenburg's transatlantic voyage.
For more about The Hindenburg and the The Hindenburg Blu-ray release, see the The Hindenburg Blu-ray Review published by Martin Liebman on April 16, 2017 where this Blu-ray release scored 2.5 out of 5.
What brought down the Hindenburg? One of disaster's great mysteries is the subject of the film of the same name, directed by Robert Wise
(The Sound of Music, Star Trek: The Motion Picture). The film offers up its own conspiracy
theory, setting off a series of events that culminate with the title vessel catching ablaze and falling to the earth below. Miraculously, about two-thirds
of the souls onboard somehow lived to tell the tale, but even still the truths behind her ill-fated final voyage remain up for debate. Unfortunately,
the film stalls out early and never gains any momentum. A tedious affair, plodding, and lacking much substance, Wise's picture might offer one of the
juicier theories, but the question is whether anyone in the audience will be awake to see how it all goes down in this fictionalized retelling of what
may be the second most iconic travel disaster of the 20th century.
An American woman and self-proclaimed psychic living quietly in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, pens a letter to Germany's American embassy warning that
the country's flagship blimp, the Hindenburg, will explode over United States territory following its long trans-Atlantic voyage. The Germans don't
take the notice seriously and decide to launch the airship, dubbed LZ-129, with nearly 100 souls aboard. Nazi Colonel Franz Ritter (George C.
Scott) is inserted onto the flight to ensure its safety from the inside. The paranoid officer runs down a list of passengers he deems suspicious, and
as the ship sails to its fate over the United States, he methodically investigates those he suspects of intending harm to one of Nazi Germany's most
prominent symbols.
While The Hindenburg may most widely be categorized as a "Disaster" film, it hardly qualifies. Typically, the disaster occupies much of the
film, and even in these sprawling, character-driven 70s genre films -- think The Poseidon Adventure or The Towering Inferno -- there's at least equal parts characterization
and
excitement. Not here. The Hindenburg aims more towards the Airport style, unfolding a mystery as disaster looms. Unfortunately,
the
film flubs that component as well. Unlike Airport, the character roster is uninteresting, stale, and even the performances lack substance or
style. Certainly the actors -- and the film offers up an appropriately quality cast that includes George C Scott, Anne Bancroft, and William Atherton
among the big
names -- are very good at their craft, but the script gives them little with which to work. The result is a film that begins at a snail's pace and never
recovers, even in the final minutes as disaster finally strikes.
Once the airship's fate takes shape, the intrigue takes its final turn, and things start to get messy, Director Robert Wise turns off the color and
presents the finale in black-and-white, likely in order to jive with real-world archival footage from the airship's real crash. Wise intercuts archival
footage with newly created footage with his characters in peril, a smorgasbord of elements cut largely in rapid-fire succession that create a jumbled
frenzy of black-and-white imagery whereupon it's easy to sort out fact from fiction, but Wise does well enough to mesh together his take on what
really brought the ship down with the real footage, and commentary, from its crash (for those unfamiliar, the radio news call of the crash is one of the most famous broadcasts of all time). Unfortunately, the film suffers
much the same fate as its subject: a lot of hype followed by an uneventful flight followed by a sudden disaster. That said, it's impossible to stay
more-or-less true to at least the basic facts and timeline and get a protracted disaster out of the Hindenburg's story. It's not like a ship that takes
hours to
sink or a building that takes its time burning down. For such a famous event, it's simply a non-starter for this style of movie.
The Hindenburg's 1080p transfer falls somewhere in the middle of the pack of Universal catalogue title releases, hardly an abomination but
certainly not a top transfer. Many of the image's inherent shortcomings seem to date back to the source. It's often softly focused and there's a definite
lack of vitality and crispness to the image. Details rarely excel, leaving faces, clothes, and various and diverse interiors around the blimp -- from nicely
appointed dining areas to its cruder interior walkways away from the areas inhabited by the passengers -- lacking any sort of serious visual complexity.
Grain is uneven, occasionally settling into a firm, filmic presentation and at at others pushing a bit soupy and noisy. Moderate flickering and light
wobble are commonplace. A few edge halos and uneven blacks are also regular characteristics. Colors usually fare well, particularly deep red Nazi
banners. Flesh tones tend to push a bit warm. At times, the image proves gorgeously filmic, and at others it presents a decidedly midrange picture. It
favors the former, slightly.
The Hindenburg features a DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 lossless soundtrack. It's a straightforward and unsurprising listen for a vintage film and a
2.0
track. Dialogue, which drives the majority of the film, pushes adequately to the center, though it sometimes struggles to go all the way, occasionally
sounding lost in no-man's land in between the center of the screen and the side speakers. Music plays with solid enough definition and front-side
spacing. Clarity can be a little shaky and it can go a touch sharp at the top end, but it's never a struggle to push the basics through with relative
ease.
There's a sincere bit of depth and drive to the rattly blimp interiors, and its fiery fate plays with adequate crunch and crashes as she descends towards
and eventually impacts the earth.
This Blu-ray release of The Hindenburg contains no supplemental content. No top menu is included; the subtitles may be turned on or off via a
crude pop-up menu.
The Hindenburg the film, much as the Hindenburg the airship, crashes and burns. Robert Wise, an otherwise excellent filmmaker with several
classics to his credit, can't do anything exciting or of much note with the material. The intrigue falls flat, the characters likewise struggle to find their
footing, and the "disaster" element comes swiftly and lasts only minutes at film's end. It's a disappointing film in an otherwise impressive roster of high
profile character-driven 70s Disaster pictures. Universal's featureless Blu-ray offers passable video and decent two-channel audio. Skip it.
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