Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Wicked on Home Video

 

I'm writing this two weeks after the physical home video release of Wicked, having just finished the audio commentaries.

I actually had to take a second to realize that Wicked is the first Oz film to get a 4K UHD release in its initial home video release rollout. As of yet, the only other Oz movie to be on the format is MGM's The Wizard of Oz, which made its 4K debut 80 years after the movie's release, long after its first home video releases. (I'd love to see The Wiz movie and Disney's Return to Oz get the 4K treatment, but that's up to the studios and any boutique labels who'd be willing to make it happen.)

The home video release of Wicked is available on multiple formats: digital copy, DVD, Blu-Ray and 4K UHD. Digital copy codes come with the Blu-Ray and 4K/Blu-Ray editions. Which edition is right for you will depend on your home video needs and what devices you own. I will note that if you go digital only, if you're in the US, make sure you're enrolled in the free service Movies Anywhere, which will make your digital copy available across multiple services. Some bonuses have not been available on all services, so this will make it so you can access all of those services without making another purchase. 

As of this writing, I have not handled or looked at a DVD edition of Wicked, having only played the 4K UHD disc. I only purchased the 4K edition, which contains two discs: a 4K UHD disc and a standard Blu-Ray. Looking at an image of the back cover of the DVD, it appears to not include any bonus features or digital copies.

I was very pleased to see all of the bonus features were included on the 4K disc. Since the inception of 4K discs, it has been pretty common practice for big studio releases to bundle the 4K with a standard Blu-Ray that contains the bonuses while the 4K just contains the movie. That's changed with Paramount and Warner Brothers now doing 4K only releases that do include the bonuses on disc, but changes it so you're now paying a premium price ($30 is about standard) for just one disc version and a digital copy. As of yet, Universal is still doing 4K/Blu-Ray/Digital combos. I was glad I could just use one disc and watch it all without swapping discs.

Video quality: 4K allows for a premium experience, this is probably as good as optical disc media will get and frankly, I fail to see how larger image will really improve the experience except for those with massively huge screens. Wicked was shot on digital, yet retains a fine film grain pattern to give it that classic film look we expect to see in theaters. That image is faithfully reproduced on the 4K disc, evident on even my smaller 4K TV (43 inch). The film's nearly pastel colored palette is also faithfully reproduced, so if you missed the movie in theaters, it's not lost in the home media release.

Audio quality: Here I need to make a complaint. To watch the movie, I had to crank my volume up a bit with my Atmos soundbar to really hear it. I don't know if the mix is lowered for home video or it doesn't translate well from theater to home media, but for many films, the audio mix needs a volume boost to really enjoy it. Which then means you need to lower it before watching something else with a different mix. The audio from the theatrical mix is faithfully represented, I just wish it had a louder mix for home viewing.

Additional playback note: as is standard with Universal Blu-Ray and 4K UHD discs now, if you power off the player before finishing the film, when the disc is started again, it will ask if you want to resume it as it plays the studio logo. It will even resume subtitles and audio commentary. Also, a Universal logo will pop up if the movie is paused for awhile, which often keeps the player from automatically powering off.

Bonuses: The movie's YouTube channel and social media pages have a wide variety of trailers and promotional videos and these go surprisingly indepth into the making of the movie. There was also a TV special preceding the movie titled "Defying Gravity: The Curtain Rises on Wicked." However, none of these are on the disc. Instead, we get a 45 minute documentary, "Making Wicked," which nicely covers the making of the movie, including casting and costume production.

There's also about 10 minutes of deleted scenes, showing some delightful or character-defining moments that would have been nice to see finished on the big screen (there are unfinished effects in these), but would have thrown off the pacing. Not everything we heard was filmed is included, nor do we get re-inclusion of stage lines that got dropped. (Such as "No need to answer, that was rhetorical" or "What's in the punch?" "Lemons and melons and pears." "Oh, my!") There is a potential we'll get further deleted scenes in a future edition, or we'll see some in the forthcoming second film, or there may yet be an extended edition in the works.

There are also three featurettes: "Welcome to Shiz," highlighting the setting for most of the film, the Gillkin university, and that much of it was an actual film set; "A Wicked Legacy," highlighting how the movie pays tribute to the stage show; and finally "The Wonderful Wizard," highlighting Jeff Goldblum's take on the Wizard of Oz.

Finally, we get a pair of audio commentaries. Director Jon M. Chu has one in which he reveals production trivia and what he wanted to convey with his filmmaking choices. Stars Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande have the other as they fangirl about fellow cast members and crew (even the librarian who attempts to shush Fiyero) and tease a few things about the second film and talk about working on the movie. Both make good listens if you can find the time.

The lone thing I didn't really check out was the singalong version in which the lyrics for the songs appear onscreen. This isn't listed in bonuses, instead being a prompt you can select after choosing to play the movie.

There's been a big shift in the physical home media market. Gone are the days when some movies would get an extra disc of extensive bonuses, sometimes even getting two or three additional discs if the movie was that big. These days, you get little more than a few deleted scenes, maybe a gag reel or a trailer, and a few press interviews edited together as what should've been a promotional piece serving for a behind the scenes look.

Wicked getting over an hour of video bonus content and two audio commentaries felt refreshing, and the fact I could access all of it on any of the three formats included in my purchase made it feel worthwhile.

While I continue to have my quibbles about home video audio mixes for movies (a good soundbar is a must these days unless you have a better audio system), I had to heartily commend Universal for putting together a great package.