ATL
Overview -As four friends prepare for life after high school, different challenges bring about turning points in each of their lives. The dramas unfold and resolve at their local rollerskating rink, Cascade.
Storyline: Our Reviewer's Take
Go ahead and laugh, but I have a soft spot for any movie that features roller skating. Maybe it is because I am a child of the '70s and '80s, a time when people actually thought it was cool to attach giant metal wheels to lace-up boots and race around and around in circles all night long to organ music and Cyndi Lauper's "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun." In any case, whenever I see roller skating up on the big screen, I can't help but suffer a severe, wistful nostalgia for my youth. (Yes, I even own total dreck like 'Roller Boogie' on DVD -- and watch it frequently.) All of which made me a sucker right upfront for a movie like 'ATL,' despite its lame title and the fact that even for a mere roller skating movie, its ambitions ultimately exceed its merits.
More or less another plotless examination of bored youth along the lines of 'American Graffiti' and 'Dazed & Confused,' 'ATL' is a snapshot of the lives of a group of teens on the cusp of adulthood. The film it most resembles is actually 'Saturday Night Fever.' Only instead of John Travolta boogying to disco down at the Galaxy 3000 in Brooklyn, we get rapper Tip "T.I." Harris (in his big screen debut) and pals skating at the fictional Cascade roller rink in Mechanicsville, Georgia. Lower class, about to graduate high school and burdened with dreams that far exceed their opportunities, the gang's nights are spent spinning around in circles to the latest sounds of "crunk" (a brand of deep-bass hip-hop popular in parts of the South). The "life on skates" milieu is an apt metaphor -- they're moving fast, but going nowhere.
To be honest, if it wasn't for the skating (which, quite frankly, isn't even that exciting), I probably wouldn't have found much to love in 'ATL.' Although in all fairness I am hardly the target audience for the film. I know nothing about crunk (honestly, at first I thought they were talking about my local gym, which is named Crunch!) and my rollerskating teen years have long since past. Still, as directed by music video vet Chris Robinson (helming his first feature), he doesn't do much to dispel the notion that his ilk can only make movies that are long on visual pizzazz but short on character. Indeed, 'ATL' plays like a two-hour music video, one endless loop of hip-hop skating montages with little else of substance in-between. Yes, there are scenes outside of the rink -- these teens' boredom extends to the local Waffle House and community swimming pool -- and thankfully this is the rare "urban" film that doesn't traffic in the cliches that all African-American kids are interested only in drugs, gangs, guns and sex. Still, there is a difference between making a film that examines aimlessness and making a film that's aimless.
Which only makes my disappointment with 'ATL' more pointed, because it had potential. Perhaps what really torpedoes the film's chance at achieving genuine resonance is that it doesn't manage a satisfactory conclusion. Yes, some of the characters have minor arcs, but the second half of the film tries to hard to suddenly wallow in moral dilemmas. Too bad 'ATL' didn't take more of a cue from a classic like 'American Graffiti.' In that one the filmmakers left their characters to enjoy their last nights before graduation doing nothing much of anything, then simply ended the film with short title cards, letting us know the fate of each character. In less that a minute, the film gained a whole new level of poignancy but didn't feel heavy-handed. Alas, 'ATL' doesn't really add up to much despite all the last-act moralizing. Too bad, 'cause I really liked the roller skating.
Video Review
Like its HD DVD counterpart, Warner Home Video presents 'ATL' on Blu-ray in a 2.35:1 widescreen 1080p/VC-1 transfer. The results are, predictably, identical on both formats. And that's a good thing, as the film really looks pretty darn great, with a nice three-dimensional picture that reminded me of just how superior high-def can look over plain old standard definition DVD. Regardless of a film's subject matter, when you're hot, you're hot.
Everything about this transfer kinda rocks. The source material is immaculate with barely any visible grain (even in the darkest scenes). Blacks and contrast are also terrific, and color reproduction is superb but not oversaturated -- even hard-to-reproduce hues like deep reds and blues are clear of chroma noise and smearing. Sharpness and detail are also up there with the best transfers I've seen, giving the image a clarity and depth that really screams high-def. If anything, this transfer may be too bright and vivid -- sometimes the blaring whites actually hurt my eyes (perhaps I should take my eye doctor's advice and not watch movies in a room with no ambient light). Still, I'm not complaining -- unless I go blind, in which case I'm suing somebody at Warner Home Video.
Audio Review
Thump-thump-thump! I don't think I've ever heard such consistently and continually powerful low bass on a home video soundtrack as I did on the original HD DVD release of 'ATL.' Same goes for this Blu-ray version, with Warner again serving up identical 640kbps Dolby Digital 5.1 surround tracks on each (note that the HD DVD gets the Dolby Digital-Plus label per the format specification).
The sound design of 'ATL' is quite active, though it is all about the beats. Dynamic range is excellent, with rich midrange and clean highs, and yes, a very powerful low end. Surround use is quite hefty, though everything is overpowered by the crunk. I have to admmit I really don't get this whole crunk thing, but if this is what the future of America is listening to, they better be wearing earplugs.
Nothing on this track is subtle, and though there is plenty of sound emanating from the rear channels, there actually isn't much directionality -- sounds are never moved around, with just a constant pumping from behind. I intentionally turned this one up to 11 at the start, but it eventually got so bad after a while that even my cats pounced out of the room in disgust. (They still haven't come back.) I can only say for once that I'm actually grateful Warner didn't produce a Dolby TrueHD track for this one, 'cause I don't think I could have taken it.
Special Features
A bit slim on the extras, this is a pretty perfunctory package of stuff that is largely promotional. With no audio commentary included, it is up to the 28-minute making-of featurette "In the Rink: A Director's Journey" to fill us in on all the production details. It's actually not bad, with plenty of behind-the-scenes footage and interviews with helmer Chris Robinson and the cast.
Next up are six deleted scenes, which run a total of less than five minutes and offer no great character or plot revelations. On the positive side, they do look pretty good.
Wrapping up the goodies is the "What You Know" music video by Tip "T.I." Harris, plus the film's theatrical trailer in 2.20:1 widescreen. And that's it for the extras.
'ATL' is certainly a fun movie, especially in its first act when it concentrates on its characters' lazy days and nights at the roller rink. Alas, it does not achieve a poignancy on the level of such teen classics as 'Saturday Night Fever' or 'American Graffiti.' Still, this is a great looking and sounding Blu-ray, easily on par with the previously released HD DVD version. Unfortunately, the extras are slim and the $34.95 list price is simply too steep to recommend this for a purchase. Those curious about this one are instead advised to save it as a rental.