ウォーリー DVD+microSDセット
フォーマット | 色, ドルビー, ワイドスクリーン |
コントリビュータ | ディズニー |
言語 | 英語, 日本語 |
稼働時間 | 1 時間 38 分 |
この商品をチェックした人はこんな商品もチェックしています
商品の説明
いつでもどこでも簡単手軽にディズニー作品が楽しめる!
おうちでも、ケータイでも、どこでもシアター。
『DVD+microSDセット』発売!人気タイトルが続々登場!
通常のDVDと本編映像を収録したmicroSDのセット商品。DVDを家庭のリビングルームで楽しむほか、microSDの映像を、ワンセグケータイやポータブル機器で視聴することが可能です。生活の様々な シーンでいつでも簡単手軽にお楽しみください。
※DVDにのみボーナス・コンテンツが収録されております。
※microSDには日本語吹替版本編のみが収録されています。
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
microSD再生対応機器は、公式サイト(下記)でご確認ください。
http://wdshe.jp/disney/microSD/taiou.jsp
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<ストーリー>
29世紀の地球。700年もの間、たった独りでゴミ処理を続けているロボット【ウォーリー】。彼の夢は、いつしか誰かと、手をつなぐこと。ある日、そんなウォーリーの前に、真っ白に輝くロボット【イヴ】が現れる。一目惚れしてしまったウォーリーが、イヴに大切な宝物“植物”を見せると、思いがけない事態が!イヴはそれを体内に取り込み、宇宙船に回収されてしまう。イヴを失いたくない!必死に宇宙船にしがみついたウォーリーは、大気圏外へと飛び出して・・・。宇宙の遥か彼方でウォーリーを待ち受けていたのは、地球の未来が懸かった壮大な冒険だった!
<同時発売>
『ボルト/DVD+microSDセット』
『アラジン スペシャル・エディション DVD+microSDセット』
登録情報
- アスペクト比 : 2.35:1
- 言語 : 英語, 日本語
- 梱包サイズ : 18.03 x 13.76 x 1.48 cm; 83.16 g
- EAN : 4959241955289
- メディア形式 : 色, ドルビー, ワイドスクリーン
- 時間 : 1 時間 38 分
- 発売日 : 2009/12/16
- 出演 : ディズニー
- 字幕: : 日本語, 英語
- 言語 : 日本語 (Dolby Digital 6.1 EX), 日本語 (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), 英語 (Dolby Digital 6.1 EX)
- 販売元 : ウォルトディズニースタジオホームエンターテイメント
- ASIN : B002R593R2
- ディスク枚数 : 1
- カスタマーレビュー:
カスタマーレビュー
私たちの目標は、すべてのレビューを信頼性の高い、有益なものにすることです。だからこそ、私たちはテクノロジーと人間の調査員の両方を活用して、お客様が偽のレビューを見る前にブロックしています。 詳細はこちら
コミュニティガイドラインに違反するAmazonアカウントはブロックされます。また、レビューを購入した出品者をブロックし、そのようなレビューを投稿した当事者に対して法的措置を取ります。 報告方法について学ぶ
-
トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
こういうタイプのファンタジー映画好きだなあ。
私個人としては、エンディングテーマ曲のピーター・ガブリエル「Down To Earth」にも感動しました。
何回観ても、ワクワクします。
他の国からのトップレビュー
A me personalmente mi ha riportato indietro negli anni 80/90 a quando ero una ragazzina.
film rimasterizzato molto bene.
The only negative would be that the Blu-ray discs are locked to Region A (the 4K disc is Region Free)
Now let's get into the Blu-ray set here. The visuals are every bit as stunning on Blu-ray as they were in the movie theater. The problem with DVDs was that the quality was always inconsistent between movies. My Stranger Than Fiction disc looks almost like 1080i, but not my Batman Begins . Not so with Blu-ray, as far as I can tell. The bigger the screen you have at your disposal the more impressed you're likely to be. I was trying to finish up my laundry as I started the movie but I could not pull my eyes away from the movie because of how jaw-dropping the visuals were. And as if that wasn't enough, the audio is equally impressive. My TV only has simulated surround sound, but it felt pretty real to me. It's funny how a movie with so little dialogue can have such powerful audio through its score and robot noises and such. I can't even imagine how incredible this set will be for those with a true Dolby setup at home.
I should really step back for a second and remark at how impressed I am by the all around presentation from Disney. They really know how to brand themselves and their intellectual property. The first thing I encountered was BD Live stuff, and so I gladly went to the Disney site to setup my account and had no troubles at all. I'm 99% sure you could go right past all of this, but I just chose not to because I was excited about BD Live. There was only 4 features available, 2 of which I couldn't use. One was movie chat, where you and other friends with the movie can watch the move at the same time while text chatting. Yes, it will synchronize your movies, so I guess this would be good for cousins in different cities or when dad is on a business trip or something. They made the smart move of only allowing this between trusted friends, not just random strangers. Another one is movie mail, in which you can splice together scenes from the movie to make messages to send to trusted friends, and also add in video of yourself (no idea how, maybe through an EyeToy for PS3 owners?). I did use the movie challenge feature though, where you can join in live trivia challenges with strangers online in 10 minute rounds of 8-15 questions. I could choose from easy or medium, and I chose easy. They were fairly simple questions and what I loved was how it would just be at the bottom of the screen while you watch the movie. So you can pause the movie, open this up, and play while resuming playback. It's actually pretty fun and you get points depending on how fast you answer. The last feature is reward points, which is confusing to me but I think you earn them through the trivia and other stuff on the Disney site and you can redeem them for avatars and other bonus features and stuff, but I think that this is still in the process of being fleshed out more.
I liked the BD Live features because I felt like they were easy to get to and integrated well, but the other stuff was even better. First of all, there are 3 ways to watch the movie, or two in addition to just watching the normal movie. One is called Cin-experience, where you get insightful director's commentary in addition to picture-in-picture pop-ups of artwork and (silent) videos of animation from the pre-visualization and design stages of the film. I usually never listen to these commentary tracks, but in a movie with as little dialogue as Wall-E, I gave it a shot and loved it. The artwork really does add a surprising amount to the experience, and I learned a lot of cool random things about the movie, like that it took them over 3 years to put it together (it sounds like they started thinking about it in the late 90s). You could also turn off the artwork from the pop-up menu, which is a standard thing with Blu-ray discs. If you watch the movie normally, you can pop-up stuff from the main menu without having to pause the movie, like choosing a scene via screen shot rather than having to do the guesswork of skipping ahead or backwards on your remote. The other way to watch the movie is kind of like Science Mystery Theater where a group of four people who helped with the film and are generally kind of geeky point out random trivia and scientific inconsistencies and such, with a silhouetted couch occasionally popping up. It really was them on the couch, or else they put an undue amount of effort into animating their arms and hands as they talked. It was a really fun spin on a commentary track and I enjoyed the little of it that I tried out (I will watch the whole movie with it eventually). The only gripe I had with these was that you couldn't just turn them off in the middle of the movie. You could fairly easily stop the movie and go back to the main movie to choose the chapter and then resume playing in normal mode, but it should've been an easy on/off switch. Despite that odd pitfall, it really does help show why Blu-ray really is better than DVD.
There's more extras than that, and what's more exciting is that they're pretty much all in high-definition, even the promotional "sneak peeks"! While I appreciate the throwback to the video cassette Disney movies where they start out with "Coming soon to video" and all that (they had the same style and everything), I still don't think I like them starting out when you put in the disc the second time. I forgive it because there were a couple of really cool ones that looked gorgeous in HD, including one for the Disney documentary Earth. That's probably going to be in every big box electronics store as a demo once it's out on Blu-ray a year from now. It was simply the most incredible thing I've seen on my TV, including Wall-E. Anyway, there are real extras here, so let me stop teasing you with these psuedo-extras. The Axiom Arcade has 4 8-bit games that look like they would've been on your NES, and I thought that they were nifty, though maybe too advanced for kids not on the tail end of elementary school. There was also an interactive storybook for kids and "Trinkets and Treasures", which seems like it was animators playing with Wall-E and Eve to do random things, like Wall-E breaking a vacuum (which was one of the early teasers for the film). For the adults there's a documentary that's over an hour long, 3-D fly throughs of the virtual sets, Buy and Large shorts, a short Geek-o-rama featurette, profiles of all the robots in the film, and deleted scenes (spliced together frames to form a rough cut) with video commentary from the director before and after the scenes. There's also the Presto short from when the movie was in theaters and a short called Burn-E, which is a deleted scene that more or less evolved into a short (there's also an option to view it with story boards). I'm probably leaving something out, but you get the idea: there's a lot here. Not counting the 3 possible viewings of the film, there's well over 2 hours of high-definition content here. Disney probably has no intention of douple dipping with this film because this set is packed with stuff. If you enjoyed the film, I highly recommend picking it up.
I went into Blu-ray with plenty of skepticism, but I've been pretty impressed so far, especially with Wall-E. It's a great movie that has gotten star treatment on Blu-ray.