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The 1960s was a time of counter culture all around. “Stick it to the man” was a big theme in the music and movies of the time, with films like Rebel Without a Cause giving the cool bad boy James Dean a shot into stardom, and Cool Hand Luke became the Shawshank Redemption of it’s time. One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest was the big popular film of the era, but I hesitate to say that it was the better picture over Paul Newman’s more laid back approach to a man who refused to let the man get him down.
The film opens with a bored and at the end of his rope war hero named Luke (Paul Newman) defacing public property by taking the heads off of parking meters. Caught by the police he is sentenced to a labor prison where the inmates are forced to work out in the hot southern sun hacking at weeds and paving roads in a chain gain. Luke is that infectious, can’t get you down, sorta guy who just goes with the flow. At first he seems like he’s going to make it as he perks up the entire prison population, but his cool demeanor and affable smile makes him a target of the warden and his men, who would rather mercilessly punish the felons than let them have a little bit of joy.
As mentioned, Cool Hand Luke is sort of a product of it’s time. It’s steeped in that 1960s “cool as ice” counter culture rebel. He’s taking the heads off of meters just to prove he can do it, and even in prison he sort of gives that Elvis Presley smile to everyone letting them know he’s too cool for school. Despite that cheesy sort of devil may care tone that was indelible to the 1960s, Cool Hand Luke remains a fantastic slow paced drama of a man proving against all odds that no matter if his body is someone else’s, his spirit is still his own.
Rating:
Rated PG by the MPAA
4K Video: Video:
Instead of being head and shoulders better and wildly different, what we have a is a much more constrained and tightened up image quality. Gone are the garish highlights from the 2008 disc, and the smearing is gone. Instead we get a nice tight and clean grain structure, along with better fine details midst the weeds and various outdoor backgdrops. While it’s not night and day better, as mentioned, it IS a distinctly better viewing experience than the aging Blu-ray, and should please fans for the most part.
Audio:
Extras:
• "A Natural-Born World-Shaker: Making Cool Hand Luke" (featurette)
• Trailer
Final Score:
Cool Hand Luke was one of the stalwart prison dramas before films like Shawshank Redemption and the like came out to surpass it. The film is definitely a product of its time, but still an indelible classic that resonates with a sort of rough and tumble “counter culture” tone to it that other films in the 60s like Rebel without a Cause was made famous for. Paul Newman is cool as ice, and the all star cast (with a BABY faced Dennis Hopper in it) is still a fantastic watch. The new 4K transfer looks solidly better than the 2008 Blu-ray that’s been recycled forever, and the new Lossless audio mix is a very hefty step up. Worth getting in my humble opinion.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Paul Newman, George Kennedy, Strother Martin, Dennis Hopper
Directed by: Stuart Rosenberg
Written by: Donn Pearce, Frank Pierson, Hal Dresner
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 HEVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 2.0 Mono, French, Spanish DD Mono
Subtitles: English SDH, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Norwegian, Swedish
Studio: Warner Brothers
Rated: PG
Runtime: 127 minutes
Blu-Ray Release Date: April 4th, 2023
Recommendation: Good Buy
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