Chaos Walking is a film about a planet where men’s thoughts are forcibly broadcast—unfiltered, messy, and oppressive. The 720p BluRay encodes this metaphor perfectly. It’s not the sharpest, not the fullest, not the definitive experience. It’s just… enough. A compromised format for a compromised film. A resolution that hides the rough edges of a production that was never truly finished.
"Chaos Walking" is a thrilling and thought-provoking sci-fi adventure that explores complex themes and features impressive action sequences and visuals. With a talented cast, including Tom Holland, Daisy Ridley, Mads Mikkelsen, and Mark Strong, this movie promises an exciting and immersive viewing experience. Chaos Walking -2021- -720p- -BluRay-
Interested in a compare/contrast with the novel’s adaptation choices or the deleted scenes only available on the full 1080p BluRay? Chaos Walking is a film about a planet
The year is 2257 on the distant planet of New World, a place where privacy has been rendered extinct by "The Noise." For Todd Hewitt, a young man born into the all-male settlement of Prentisstown, life is a constant, exhausting broadcast. Every fleeting thought, every buried secret, and every passing whim is projected as a swirling, iridescent cloud of sound and imagery for everyone to see and hear. It’s just… enough
Tech specs * 1h 49m(109 min) * Sound mix. Dolby Atmos. DTS. IMAX 6-Track. Dolby Digital. * Aspect ratio. 2.39 : 1. Chaos Walking - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray
Suggestion: support Trash Guides "plex" naming formats - Emby
Ultimately, Chaos Walking is best understood as a noble failure. The 720p BluRay version, despite being a technical medium of distribution, inadvertently serves as a metaphor for the film itself: high-definition potential rendered in a format that is noticeably inferior to the intended 4K vision. It is a film that screams its ideas at the audience—about truth, gender, and memory—but like its protagonist, it cannot control its own Noise. What remains is a fascinating, broken artifact of a post- Hunger Games era that tried to push young adult dystopia into darker, stranger territory, only to be silenced by the very industry that enabled it.