Crazy, Stupid, Love Blu-ray Review: A Surprisingly Touching, Romantic Comedy Without Need For Gimmicks
The second release of the week in which Ryan Gosling plays an enviably cool, incredibly masculine character. And it's another highly recommended home release.
rating:4.5
Advertisement
Ryan Gosling seems to have made a career out of making very clever choices. Half-Nelson, Drive, Blue Valentine, even The Notebook - all were critically or commercially successful, and all added to his status as one of the hottest properties currently working in Hollywood. The decision to take on the role of Jacob, a beautifully cool, effortlessly suave womaniser opposite Steve Carell's hopeless, separated Mr Nobody, Cal looked like the first really safe commercial decision. After all a comedy, opposite Carell, in a hugely generous role that allowed him to play the impervious anti-hero type without any real comedy responsibility could lead to no real problems unless the film failed. And thankfully, Crazy, Stupid, Love doesn't fail to deliver on any count. It is a chemistry-driven comedy with some major laughs and two central performances from Gosling and Carell that are equally irresistible, and hugely likeable, even at their most chauvinistic. Rounding out the cast are the wonderful red-headed duo of Emma Stone and Julianne Moore, as lover and ex-wife to Jacob and Cal respectively, and Jonah Bobo as Cal's sage son Robbie who rather ingeniously is the filter through which the film explores ideas of love. There are also prominent supporting roles for Annaleigh Tipton (a case of a 23 year old pretty convincingly playing a 17 year old for once), the beautiful Marisa Tomei, and Kevin Bacon, who is understated and oddly likeable as Moore's new love interest. It is a very strongly put together cast, and all do their part with a very good, and very funny script which never resorts to mawkish romance or unnecessary gross-out sequences. Quality
rating:4
Without much real spectacle, the transfer copes very well. The print looks very good, contrast is consistent, colours and black levels are generally very impressive and there remains a pleasant filmic grain that means there is some slight compromise on detail and texture quality, but it's far from a problematic amount. There's very little to really point out as problematic though, and what the film asks of the blu-ray is generally very well handled. The sound design isn't of the calibre that really shows off the capabilities of the medium, but then the film hardly demands it. What the track does include is dutifully handled by the blu-ray transfer: ambient noise is strong enough, dialogue is clean and precise and the music is presented near perfectly. A very good transfer.Extras
rating:1.5
Advertisement
Largely just fluff, there really isn't anything to write home about here, but the quality of the Deleted Scenes (apart from one) and the entertainment factor of the silly short piece between Gosling and Carell lift this bare bones release just above the lowest rating. But only just. Good way to try and spoil a bloody good film that. Deleted Scenes The Player Meets His Match Steve and Ryan Walk Into a Bar Crazy, Stupid, Love is available to buy on blu-ray and DVD from tomorrow.