Characters come to life with innovative facial animations and
full audio dialogue.
Not exact matches
It's a joyless, grace - free slog dominated by repetitive stop - and - pop shootouts, lifeless linear environments, and inconsistent weapon physics, not to mention
full - stop gameplay pauses during certain actions (like detonating a robot with an EMP grenade), obnoxiously tacky
dialogue, missed
audio cues, and overwrought enemy death screams that replay incessantly.
Scoring and soundtrack cuts are separated pleasingly from the
dialogue, and brief lunges of violence are given the
audio full court press.
The 5.1 DTS HD master
audio soundtrack gets the job done, most getting your attention with its distribution of period music, though also keeping
dialogue and voiceover
full - bodied and crisp.
The accompanying Dolby Digital 5.1
audio is fittingly unobtrusive, with music and crickets being the only soundtrack elements to creep into the surround channels;
dialogue is
full and easy to decipher.
Comparatively disappointing, the 2.0 DTS - HD MA mono
audio sounds flat and thin, with Terry Alexander's
dialogue, in particular,
full of sibilant s's.
The 5.1 DTS - HD master
audio soundtrack, on the other hand, is
full of peaks and valleys to an annoying degree, forcing you to watch with a remote in hand, ready to lower the volume for powerful action effects, then raise it again to hear the
dialogue.
Blu - ray episodes are presented in
full 1080p HD, 16 × 9 video and stereo
audio featuring English and Japanese
dialogue options.
The
full film (with
dialogue, etc,) includes chapter markets, English and Spanish
audio options, and English and Spanish subtitle options.