Codec: HEVC / H.265 (84.2 Mb/s)
Resolution: 4K (2160p)
HDR: Dolby Vision, HDR10+
Aspect ratio: 2.40:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
#English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-bit)
#English: Dolby Digital 2.0 (Commentary with Co-writer / Director Joe Carnahan and Editors Roger Barton and Jason Hellmann)
A simple and clear description of the characters involved. The best plane crash scene in world cinema. The struggle for survival. A view of the world order through the eyes of forced philosophy. Loss, grief, and hope. Eyes up... to the sky. The merging of the past, present, and future. The power of a single moment stretching everywhere. Warmth hidden behind a veil of endless frosty cold. Awareness and doom. A whole life inside, its consequences before your eyes. A step, a heavy step. It gets harder and harder. An element of natural terror. But beauty is everywhere. The dark shadows of psychology and its bright beginnings. Life, its decades. Years and months. Weeks and days. Hours, minutes, and seconds. There is no more time, only a moment remains. The growth of its significance. The fear of loneliness. The pain of the soul and body. Questions. Why? March 18, 2009. The triumph of misunderstanding. The triumph of regret. But the step is taken, and it does not yield.
The cameraman at the center of an emotional outburst. Convincing hypnosis as a result of teamwork. A drama painted by Karnahan's hands. A snowy mass in the power of acting talent and unprecedented masculine will. An atmosphere capable of breaking the life-affirming vacuum. The feeling of the shoulders of producers Tony and Ridley Scott. A subtle play of sound, its mixing, in conjunction with a brilliant soundtrack that knows its place. In the best traditions, the struggle of old-school filming for a strong visual component. The characters' dialogues are thoroughly imbued with life. A completely breathtaking action film, whose heroes make you clench your fists in some moments and shed tears of sympathy and hope in others. A dialogue with nature. With God. Finding yourself in the heart of your fear.
The Grey is one of the best things to happen to modern world cinema, incapable of listening to even the slightest criticism. Problems with perception? Learn to watch movies carefully. What makes a person human is their ability to be attentive to those around them. There are few films in the world that treat human life with such reverence. A deeply emotional shock from the first to the last minute.