![]() ![]() ![]() The only area that left me a little wanting were some of those darker shots, primarily the low-lit interiors and a handful of exterior evening shots. Film grain is fine and it’s rendered cleanly, looking natural. But what just absolutely blew me away was Judy Davis’ hair: every individual strand, every tight curl, all of it can be clearly made out through close-ups to medium shots. Those same landscape shots deliver a lot of finer object detail, like individual blades of grass, tree bark, rocks, and so on, while interiors also deliver all of the textures in the space cleanly. What really took me back, though, is the level of detail. Even the dirty, brown landscapes look wonderful. The landscapes look incredible throughout thanks to the blues of the skies and the greens of the fields. Outside of the darker exteriors and the occasional nighttime shot, the film is unbelievably bright with gorgeous looking colours. I won’t build anything up and instead just come out and say the image looks exceptional. The film is presented on a dual-layer disc in its original aspect ratio of 1.85:1 with 1080p/24hz high-definition encode. Previously released on Blu-ray by Blue Underground, Gillian Armstrong’s My Brilliant Career receives a new edition form the Criterion Collection, which makes use of a new 4K restoration sourced from the 35mm original camera negative. ![]()
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