LABYRINTH: 4K UltraHD Blu-ray (Columbia 1986) Sony Home Entertainment
All of the
flawless know-how that master puppeteer, Jim Henson could pour into a
$25,000,000 budget, a pop-tune inspired soundtrack from the legendary David
Bowie, and, some of the most unreservedly unimaginable, and still very
impressive, special effects went into the creation of Labyrinth (1986); visually, a richly layered fable a la the
Brothers Grimm meets Frank L. Baum and Maurice Sendak. Yet, despite its
inventiveness, this compendium of clichés and exoticism failed to jell beyond
the pedigree of such impressive visuals. Superficially at least, there was
nothing inherently mistaken in pursuing the rather heavily trodden escapist ‘dream’ motif (for which an entire body
of science fiction has relied on time immemorial) or our proto-feminist
heroine, entering this illusory province of infinite joys and dangers by way of
an Alice Through the Looking Glass porthole. Regrettably, there was also not
much more to the point of Terry Jones’ screenplay. For once having crossed to
the other side of its highly stylized insanity, the Labyrinth seriously lacked the impetus of a forward-thinking
narrative structure; the singular quest in the journey leading to more mayhem
and misadventures with misanthropes than a search for self-discovery; usually
the purpose of such soulful enterprises. We should pause a moment to tip our
hats to 1939’s The Wizard of Oz,
Dorothy Gale admitting to the Good Witch of the North that if she ever feels
the urge to go in search of her own heart’s desire again, she will never look
further than her own backyard – “…because
if it isn’t there, then I never really lost it in the first place.” No movie before or since has done as much for
our ageless suspension of childhood disbelief while proving the affirmation of
these daydreams that, far from dissipating, seem only to ripen more sincerely
with the passage of time.
At least in
theory, Labyrinth has all glitter,
panache and makings of an epic children’s movie classic like Oz. Yet, it
foundered at the box office – barely clawing back half its initial investment.
But this rather makes sense to me now. I can recall seeing the movie in ’86.
Even at the ‘mature’ age of 15 (the
same age as our heroine) I found Labyrinth
more disturbing than enchanted. Fair enough, the literary world of the Brothers
Grimm is peppered in the edgily dark and demonic. Yet, in the case of Labyrinth, here was a tale about a
bitter ingénue, Sarah Williams (Jennifer Connelly) who, with tearful spite and
venom toward her stepmother, and, ‘big
sister’ cruelty re-channeled to a helpless and blubbering baby, wishes the
innocent banished to an eternal and forgotten lair of fantasy she knows
absolutely nothing about. Then, with her miscarriage of imagination devilishly
fulfilled by Jareth, the Goblin King (David Bowie) – a gangly, punk-haired,
Dracula-caped, shape-shifting tease, spewing platitudes and glitter in tandem –
Sarah pursues a rescue intervention from his brooding netherworld; a place
where virtually all friendships are fickle and fleeting, and all ‘creatures’ encountered along the way are
deformed non-human entities. Meanwhile, the Goblin King holds other people’s
seemingly unwanted children captive in a sort of ageless vacuum for his own
amusement.
Some thirty
years later, I still see no reason to revise my initial assessment of Labyrinth as a thoroughly ambitious,
but equally as flawed masterpiece. Despite its cult status, and a rather
intriguing performance by Bowie, tailor-made to his life-long adoration for
gender-bending make-up and costuming, Labyrinth
is grotesquely undernourished and wafer-thin on plot and purpose. Again, I defer
to MGM’s mammoth Wizard of Oz.
Unlike Oz’s Dorothy, entering a fascistic alter-reality, impacting positive
change via three enduring friendships and, in the process, liberating the
denizens of its demesne under a tyrannical witch, but also the false-prophesized
micromanagement of a ‘humbug’; Sarah in Labyrinth
is never motivated by any such altruism. She is merely desperate to undue the
impromptu madness she herself has caused before dad (Christopher Malcolm) and
step-mama (Shelley Thompson) can unearth her wicked wretchedness. If Oz is a place where good girls go in
search of their better selves, than the Goblin King’s labyrinth is a purgatory
lurking with temptations for tarts who moronically believe they can do better
without any help at all. Jareth’s domain is not a magical fairyland ‘somewhere over the rainbow’, but an arid
and generally unkempt principality, overgrown in vines and weeds, a dystopian
paradise gone hopelessly to seed with periodically cobble-stoned Tyrolian
townships and moss-laden, swampy ‘stinky’
marshes where only the fittest – or at least, the most enterprising – can
survive. Worse, at least for the picture’s success, is the queerly unsettling,
if briefly mutual, sexual attraction between the child, Sarah and worldly
Jareth; Bowie’s otherworldly presence a potent potion for this burgeoning young
lass who lacks his level of experience, though otherwise possesses the chutzpah
to play his game on his terms by exploiting her own ‘come hither’ eligibility
as an intoxicating counterpoint of interest.
The project
was begun in earnest after an impromptu conversation between Jim Henson and
Brian Froud; the pair having worked together on Henson’s other pet project, The Dark Crystal (1982). Froud, who
would ultimately serve as Labyrinth’s ‘conceptual designer’, pitched some of
his ideas to Henson with a passion for the age-ole folklore of goblins as its
centerpiece. While Henson liked the idea, he also encouraged Froud to seek out
the humor rather than the pathos of the piece. Henson was also more determined
his puppets should have ‘character’ this time around. Yet, almost from the beginning, the concept
for Labyrinth became muddled. An early novella, commissioned by Henson from
author, Dennis Lee seemed to shed some light. Indeed, Henson admired the
lyrical quality of the piece, passing it along to screenwriter, Terry
Jones. However, Jones disliked
practically everything about Lee’s book so much, he elected instead to begin
afresh, cribbing from Froud’s concept art for his only inspiration. Although Jones would receive sole writing
credit on Labyrinth, the shooting
script would continue to morph and was to be heavily rewritten by George Lucas,
Laura Philips and Elaine May, with Henson putting in some of his own finishing
touches. What ultimately emerged from all this tinkering was a movie Jones
would all but disavow.
Part of the
problem lay in Jim Henson’s decision to cast David Bowie as the irrefutable ‘star presence’; a move resulting in the
part of Jareth being greatly revised and expanded. Initially, Jareth was just
another puppet creature in Henson’s arsenal of convincing oddities. Eventually,
the character outgrew this primitive concept; Henson leaning more toward the
idea of hiring a pop star to play the part. While the likes of Sting, Prince,
Mick Jagger, and Michael Jackson were all briefly considered, Henson eventually
hit on the inspired notion of casting Bowie in the lead. One cannot
underestimate Bowie’s distinctiveness; his unique and angular physicality
married to one of the most iconic and trend-setting careers of any musician in
his vintage. Bowie had studied acting, arguably his first true love, before
embarking upon a career in music. Yet, only more recently had he chosen to
split his time between live concert performances, writing, producing and
recording albums; also, to include a breakneck schedule of thoroughly
impressive theatrical and movie appearances; 1976’s The Man Who Fell to Earth, 1979’s Just a Gigolo, and 1983’s The
Hunger among them.
And indeed, in
revisiting Labyrinth some thirty
years on, regrettably after Bowie’s untimely passing, his performance remains
the one thing about the picture ostensibly that has not aged. Bowie brings a
certain aristocratic je ne sais quoi and flamboyance to the part; also, a
distinctly asexual glamour that is as innocuous as it remains succinctly subtle
in the art of scintillation. “I'd always
wanted to be involved in the music-writing aspect of a movie that would appeal
to children of all ages, as well as everyone else,” Bowie would later
confide in an interview, “…and I must say
that Jim gave me a completely free hand with it. The script itself was terribly
amusing without being vicious or spiteful or bloody, and it had a lot more
heart in it than many other special effects movies. So I was pretty hooked from
the beginning.” Yet, to some extent, Bowie’s participation also offsets
and/or unhinges the strength of our heroine’s soulful search for
self-discovery.
In Terry
Jones’ original screenplay, Jareth is an enigma of Sarah’s mind; elusive, yet
hypnotically compelling; the labyrinth, not revealed until Sarah’s discovery of
it in the third act. It thus, and simultaneously, remains a mystery to the
audience. In the finished picture, however, the labyrinth is represented
several times throughout the story; Bowie leaping about its Roman forum-esque
construction in a rather transparent music video-ish performance that could
have just as easily been excised from TV’s
The Muppet Show (1976-81). Between 1983 and 1985, Jones’ screenplay would
undergo many mutations and no less than twenty-five heavily revised drafts.
Bowie was not particularly impressed with the script, believing it lacked humor
and pathos. At one point, he even contemplated withdrawing from the project,
his fears allayed by Henson’s repeated promises that ‘improvements’ were being made to accommodate his interests. It is perhaps noteworthy to recall in these
early drafts, the protagonist of our story shifted from an Arthurian liege to
as equally as bygone a princess, and finally, to a little girl from Victorian
England. To keep budgetary concerns to a minimal, the bookends of Labyrinth
were eventually updated to then contemporary America, making Sarah’s atypical
fascination with spotty widgets, spirits, goblins and the like all the more
curious out of context.
Labyrinth began its arduous five month shoot on April 15, 1985
at Elstree Studios in London; a relatively brief schedule for principle
photography preceded by almost a year and a half of pre-production to create
convincing creature designs. Employing virtually every major sound stage the
studio had to offer, Production Designer Elliot Scott and Art Directors, Terry
Ackland-Snow, Roger Cain, Peter Howitt, Frank Walsh and Michael White
handcrafted a fantastic assortment of indoor sets, requiring the expert
execution of forced perspective and enveloping dioramas – arguably, the largest
ever built – to mimic this vast and seemingly endless landscape. To anchor the
tale in its ‘American setting’, the
production crew also took advantage of staging the movie’s bookends in Upper
Nyack, Piermont and Haverstraw, NY. There is, to be sure, a certain level of
verisimilitude to these opening shots depicting Sarah, soiled in her ‘princess
white’ robes as she races home from her afternoon of make-believe during an
impromptu thundershower, that the rest of the studio-bound work never entirely
assuages; despite the inclusion of 120 truckloads of tree branches, 1,200 turfs
of grass, and 850 lbs. of dry leaves scattered throughout these stylized sets
to suggest some pseudo-authenticity beyond their artifice. But the uncanny
illusion of life, oft’ honed by a small army of puppeteers toiling behind the
scenes, would be most complexly realized in Hoggle – the elfin, pock-skin
‘garden gnome’ who serves as Sarah’s reluctant guide through the zigzagging
abyss. Ultimately, character actress
Shari Weiser was suited into the costume, providing the spritely pantomime of
body movements while four radio-controlled puppeteers plied their craft to will
a separate ‘performance’ from the
elf’s audio-animatronic head. Despite its transatlantic exodus from Hollywood,
most of Labyrinth’s creatives were
culled from talent loyal to Henson’s state’s side production company, including
a good many ‘Fraggle Rock’ alumni;
Frank Oz, Dave Goelz, Karen Prell, Ron Mueck and Rob Mills among them.
After a main
title sequence set to Bowie’s ‘Underground’,
and featuring an animated barn owl swooping in and out of the credits,
Labyrinth opens with Sarah Williams rehearsing for a part in a play in a
park-like setting with her loveable mutt, Merlin. A light spring rain stirs
Sarah from this fantasy role-playing to recall she is supposed to be at home
preparing to babysit her infant brother, Toby (Toby Froud) while their father,
Robert and Sarah’s stepmother, Irene go out to dinner. Coming into direct
conflict with Irene on the front steps; then, acting belligerent toward Robert,
Sarah next sets about tormenting her already tear-stained brother with angry
diatribes that do little to comfort his tears. Aside: as a fifteen year old boy
in 1986 I could not imagine a more hellish nightmare than to have been left in
Sarah’s care. What a spoilt and viperous brat!
Ah, but Sarah is in for a good ‘head shake’ as it were; her rash request
to have the fictional Goblin King from her play swoop down and remove Toby from
her care, suddenly granted. The execution of this abduction is, in tandem, one
of the most exhilarating and terrifying moments in the picture; the expansive
bedroom set filled with shafts of bluish lightening from the storm outside and
the infrequent grizzly giggles of goblins hiding everywhere in plain sight,
awaiting the satisfaction of their master – Jareth.
What occurs
next is rather inexcusably befuddling. Jareth appears in the form of a barn
owl, miraculously transformed into David Bowie. He offers Sarah a gift in
exchange for Toby; a clear-glass orb juggled between his fingertips, suddenly
transformed into a hideous snake. Urging Sarah to forget about Toby, the girl
instead takes up Jareth’s challenge to pursue him into the labyrinth. Given
Jareth’s initial abject discouragement, it is more than a little confusing he
should then grant Sarah a brief pardon into his private kingdom – thirteen
hours to ‘solve’ the riddle of the labyrinth, before commenting “what a waste,
Sarah” and vanishing into thin air, leaving the girl to fend for herself in
this strange land. Entering the maze by way of a magic doorknocker, Sarah has
difficulty discerning turns and corners. Yet most of what she visually
perceives is an optical illusion. Hoggle appears, but is of little help at
first. After all, why bother. Unraveling the mystery of the labyrinth is
impossible. But Sarah gets advice from a cockney worm; actually, a bit more
misdirection than she bargained for, plummeting down a bizarre mine shaft
comprised of ‘helping hands’ and reunited with Hoggle in a dark oubliette.
While Hoggle is ever-pessimistic about their future, Sarah encourages him to
reconsider the labyrinth as little more than a semi-complex puzzle to be
solved. In response to her dismissal of his game, Jareth suddenly reappears. He
ups the ante by advancing the clock several hours ahead, thus providing Sarah
with less time to search for Toby. Jareth then threatens Sarah and her newfound
companion with a strange metallic excavating device burrowing down the tight
mine shaft, hurtling towards them and sure to crush and annihilate.
At the last
possible moment, Sarah and Hoggle discover a secret passage and a wooden ladder
leading back up to the surface. More encounters with strange and unearthly
creatures from this netherworld follow; a sage with the upper half of a talking
ostrich as his headdress, demands remuneration from Sarah (she gives up her
ring) but then absolutely refuses to tell her anything in return. Pursued by
warring pygmies, Sarah and Hoggle become estranged; Sarah stumbling across a
gigantic beast, tied and dangling upside down from a tree. The beast, Ludo,
briefly functions in the role of Sarah’s protector. However, he too gets lost
in the Bog of Eternal Stench; Jareth reappearing to Hoggle, ordering him to
give Sarah a freshly ripened peach (think the tainted apple from Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs 1938).
In the meantime, Sarah is accosted by ‘the
Firies’ – the least convincing of Jim Henson’s creatures, shot in full
figure against a blue screen and unconvincingly matted into the live action.
The Firies perform another of Bowie’s songs, ‘Chilly Down’ before trying to
separate Sarah’s head from her body. Mercifully, Hoggle comes to Sarah’s aid; a
betrayal that causes Jareth to exile both of them to the Bog of Eternal Stench
where Sarah is reunited with Ludo. From here, the encounters grow more
frequently episodic. The primary criticism I have against Labyrinth is it completely
fails to engage the viewer with anything better than these brief encounters,
meant primarily to show off the technical prowess of Jim Henson’s puppet
cavalcade. It’s all show rather than an experience.
Sarah, Hoggle,
and Ludo are denied access to a narrow bridge by Sir Didymus, an
anthropomorphic Fox Terrier and his English Sheepdog, Ambrosius. Yet, like
virtually all the other obstacles Sarah has encountered, and will continue to,
this one too is a red herring in misdirection, merely meant to cleverly delay
the journey without actually causing us to fear its failure altogether. All
Sarah has to do is ask Didymus’ permission to pass. This granted, she now falls
prey to Hoggle’s ‘gift’ – Jareth’s juicy peach, causing a hallucinogenic
nightmare to further detour Sarah’s odyssey. Instead, she imagines herself in a
trance-like state during a lavishly appointed masked ball; Jareth steadily
approaching to proclaim his love. The courtiers are as a gathering of wax
mannequins escaped from Madame Tussauds; the illusion shattered when the
memories Jareth is attempting to suppress with this elaborate ‘dream’ come
barreling back into Sarah’s subconscious. She collapses, and is plunged into
yet another illusion, that of having arrived to the relative safety of her own
bedroom. It is, of course, even more misdirection; Sarah realizing the room is
cobbled together from spare parts and relocated in a vast junkyard on the
outskirts of the labyrinth. Ludo and
Didymus come to her rescue and together they make their way to Goblin City.
Now, Hoggle sheepishly – and rather bravely – helps everyone get past the tower
gate. Despite his feeling unworthy, Sarah and the others forgive and welcome
Hoggle back into their fold. Determined to prevent Sarah her entry into his
castle, Jareth sends the goblin army to attack. But these diminutive warriors
are no match for Ludo’s strength, as he hurls mountain rocks and other debris
to clear a direct path to the castle. Sarah enters a room modeled on the famed
Escher Staircase; its forced perspective, resulting in a discombobulating
sequence, seemingly unbound by the laws of gravity.
In one of Labyrinth’s creepiest and utterly icky
moments, Jareth makes one final attempt to prevent Sarah from fulfilling her
journey’s end. He promises her his eternal love if she will only ‘submit’ to
him and thus surrender Toby into his care. Recalling for the first time the
circumstances she is presently living through, mirror the events as depicted in
the play she was rehearsing for at the start of the movie, Sarah begins to
recite the lines she has learned, stumbling over a pivotal bit of dialogue; the
only words that prevent her from returning home safely. As Jareth dangles the
glass orb before Sarah, pleading for her reconsideration, she draws from memory
the play’s definitive moment of liberation – “…and you have no power over me.”
The spell is broken and Jareth dissolves into a heap of rags blowing
restlessly in the wind. Sarah discovers herself back in the foyer of her family
home; the barn owl flying out the open front door as she races upstairs to
discover Toby peacefully asleep in his crib. As with most everything that has
occurred thus far, Labyrinth’s
finale is nonsensical. Sarah returns to her bedroom, slightly wiser and more
‘grown up’, but as saddened it all now appears to have come to an abrupt end.
However, just as unexpectedly, Hoggle, Ludo, Didymus and Ambrosius, together
with an eclectic assortment of creatures encountered along the way, suddenly
reappear to surround her in jubilation. Perhaps, Sarah reasons, there is just a
little more time to be squeezed out of ‘childhood’
before the inevitable-ness of time marching on creeps in for good. As the
revelers rejoice, Jareth, in owl form, quietly observes from beyond the window
before flying off into the night.
Despite its
uber-sophisticated blend of puppetry and other sundry visual effects, Labyrinth
is a convoluted fable at best. When stripped of all its ‘creature comforts’ it
is not an altogether prepossessing one either. It desperately wants to be
hailed as a revisionist’s mythology, and, moreover, a new ‘children’s movie
classic’ on par with The Wizard of Oz. However, the cinematic Oz is a fairytale of the highest order, primarily because it is
imbued with those intangibly light touches of faith in the future. And it has a
heroine who never wanes in her positivism or goal. By contrast, Labyrinth’s Sarah is repeatedly delayed
and frequently allows herself this luxury to wallow, either in self-pity or
simply in the latest hallucination du moment.
She is neither as clever nor as driven in her pursuit, primarily because
outside of finding the brother she has exiled to this otherworldly maelstrom,
she cannot see the ‘proverbial forest for
its trees’; that a return to mid-town America does not necessarily equate
to a restoration of life as she once knew it, or even better – an appreciation
for – the humdrum of it she so easily dismissed at the start.
Alas, Labyrinth equally suffers from the
elephantiasis of its top-heavy visual design that, while breathtaking, does
not, in and of itself, generate the intimate or engaging backdrop onto which
all its allegorical and semi-nonsensically staged action can thrive. While Oz’s trajectory moves in a linear
forward direction, the purpose of Sarah’s journey in Labyrinth’s is neither clearly stated nor ever resolved completely
at the end. In hindsight, the most impressive aspect of the movie is its SFX,
virtually all but a handful achieved full-scale and in-camera. The movie’s
other great salvation is David Bowie’s performance, imbued with stirrings in
tandem of empathy, plodding vindictiveness, and, in a few scenes, an almost
pedophiliac ‘romantic’ desire to
possess Jennifer Connelly’s Sarah; herself, transformed from wicked to winsome
before the end; a real woman with a ‘reel’ woman’s heart. Does any of this work? Partly. Should any of
it make sense? Hmmm. At some point, even the most fantastical of all
mind-bending movie trips has to meet the most basic criteria: to tell its story
succinctly, competently, and purposefully without pretending to be anything
more than an entertainment; a way to conveniently fill up our leisure with a
good yarn and a dash of thought-provoking magic not to be unearthed in the
natural world. Labyrinth fails in
this purpose, mainly because Jim Henson is more invested in the vignettes, the
technicalities, and the precision of bringing ‘life’ to the inanimate among the
cast. As ever, this was, is and remains
Henson’s great gift to the world. It does not, however, equate to movie magic
of the highest order – at least, not in Labyrinth’s
case.
I am genuinely
at a loss to figure out Sony’s marketing. They are a progressive studio – oh,
decidedly so; what with Grover Crisp at the helm, curating, restoring and
remastering the Columbia catalog as no other studio’s archive has been and
continues to be maintained. Kudos to Mr. Crisp. Praise indeed from yours truly.
Not so much to Sony’s marketing braintrust who would release an entire series
of ‘mastered in 4K’ 1080p Blu-rays
only to repurpose them as legitimate 4K releases barely a year later. Yes, I
get the strategy – a double dip money grab. But could not the same effort have
been achieved releasing, as Sony has now done, a Blu-ray/4K combo pack with
plenty of spritz and giggles for the early adopter and staunchly ensconced
Blu-ray afficianado? But I digress. Labyrith was not part of Sony’s Cinema
Series, but received a handsome hardcover 1080p Blu-ray release last year. This
year, it gets a 4K release with no hardcover and no booklet. For shame!
Otherwise, Sony is as Sony does – perfection itself.
Labyrinth looks stunning in 4K restoration utilizing the
original camera negative. But it also looked superb on regular Blu-ray. I’ll
simply reiterate my old argument herein; that if you are watching your movies
on screens up to 75 inches there really is no point switching to 4K just yet.
The differential impact is minimal. That said, the results herein speak for
themselves: a substantial upsurge in color fidelity and density, fine detail,
and, accurately produced grain structure, perfectly capable of capturing the
distinctive and subtler textures employed in these stunning visuals. Prepare to
be dazzled because Labyrinth in
either incarnation has never looked better. Comparatively, the 4K cannot help but outshine
the Blu in projection on 100+ inch screens. Differences become apparent then in
accuracy of grain reproduction and minute subtlties in color. The whole point
here is that you shouldn’t be looking for ‘differences’ but ‘improvement’ and
on that scale the Blu-ray suffices for most of the viewing audience. So, if you
already own Labyrinth on Blu-ray and
do not have a George Lucas-styled set up in your basement, you can pass on this
reissue without concern you are somehow being stiffed out of a ‘better’ overall
presentation.
On a truly big
wall-sized screen, the 4K is decidedly preferred. Labyrinth’s carefully composed shots and exquisitely detailed
old-school film-making techniques put virtually all of today’s digital
photography to shame; Alex Thomson’s artistry remains a many-splendored thing;
the likes of which ‘reel’ cinema magic is oft made. Detail is the most markedly improved. I found
myself noticing things like the print of the wallpaper in Sarah’s bedroom, or
some of the surreal textures in the puppet’s latex skin and artificial hair.
No, it did not take me ‘out of the story’
– such as it is. If anything, a new appreciation steadily evolved for the
ultra-high level of craftsmanship pursued and perfected on this project. Detail
even emerges from the shadows; blacks velvety rich, though never crushing and
skin tones looking more genuine than ever.
There is absolutely nothing to complain about here. Labyrinth is a reference quality disc sure to delight its myriad of
fans. Labyrinth also gets a new
Dolby Atmos 7.1 track – yep, the same one that came on the Blu-ray but with
4K’s expanded gamut and just like the image, more subtly refined. This is a truly immersive sonic experience;
low, sustained rumbles during the thunderstorm, creature groans and moans
sounding true to life rather than manufactured Foley and wow, dialogue so
crisply rendered you will swear the cast is doing a live reading in front of
your screen. The clarity of the music is also lushly spread around with careful
distinction and an infinitely more robust bass than was available on the old
Blu-ray release. The vocals are front and center as they should be. But there
is atmospheric support creeping in on all sides. Anyone questioning the
validity of converting older audio recordings to Dolby Atmos need only take a
careful listen how good they can sound when all the care, bells and whistles
have been applied with due diligence.
Lastly, Sony
has pulled out all the stops for the most comprehensive assortment of extras on
the Blu-ray only (mercifully included in this repackage/reissue), beginning
with ‘The Henson Legacy’ – featuring Jennifer Connelly and members of
the Henson family, plus a rare trip to the Center for Puppetry Arts that
includes over 100 puppets from Labyrinth.
Mythbuster’s Adam Savage hosts a Q&A with behind-the-scenes craftsmen,
Brian Henson, David Goelz, Karen Prell and Sheri Weiser. In what must be
considered the most poignant of the featurettes, Jennifer Connelly pays a
glowing tribute to David Bowie in The Goblin King, along with Jim
Henson’s children, Brian and Cheryl: bring Kleenex. Best of all, unlike
Disney’s recent misfire with Beauty and The Beast, Sony has no
compunction about including ALL of the previously afforded extras on their
reissue of Labyrinth, including the
old Picture-in-Picture commentary,
another by Brian Froud, the original – and frankly, very comprehensive ‘making
of’ documentary, plus two additional documentaries, exploring the movies vast
assortment of characters, and a behind-the-scenes look at ‘Goblin City’; finally,
the original theatrical trailer. It bears repeating that when it comes to
Blu-ray, Sony remains ahead of the pack. Grover Crisp and his magicians are
owed the utmost respect for bringing yet another vintage catalog release to the
forefront with superior mastering and restoration techniques that have yielded
bar none the most impressive Blu-ray of this newly inaugurated fall season. For
those who have afforded Labyrinth
its cult status over these many years, this 4K up-convert of the 30th
anniversary should only be considered for those who either do not own the movie
as yet or have the capacity to fully appreciate 4K in all its glory. Permit us
to worship and give thanks.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3
VIDEO/AUDIO
5+
EXTRAS
5+
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