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The 40-Year-Old Virgin – Blu-ray Disc Review

September 15, 2008 – 7:01 pm - Posted by: Brendan Surpless

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,


Blu-ray Disc Review

4.5 out of 5 starsThe Movie Itself has an average rating of 7.5 on IMDb
4 out of 5 starsVideo Quality 1080p in AVC MPEG-4 on a 50gb disc
4 out of 5 starsAudio Quality
DTS-HD 5.1 Master Audio
4.5 out of 5 starsBonus Materials
include U-Control and more!
Rated: & UNRATED
Year: – 2008
Length: – 116 minutes & 133 minutes (UNRATED)
Studio:Universal
Region:Region 1 (A)


Overall VerdictHighly Recommended

Buy it for $14.99 @ Amazon.com
Buy it for $14.99 @ Amazon.com


— Review written by: Brendan Surpless

Trailer:



The Movie Itself was directed by the infamous Judd Apatow. Steve Carrell plays Andy Stitzer, a socially awkward forty year old whose definition of a busy weekend is preparing an egg salad sandwich and changing the color of his figure’s pants. When Andy reveals (by accident one might add) to his colleagues that his virginity is still firmly attached during a poker game, they set about helping him lose it as quickly as possible. Naturally, this entails humiliation, comical misunderstandings and a fair amount of low-brow humor.

The 40 Year Old Virgin” is the type of comedy that is funny mainly because of how you start to feel for Andy. Carell is perfect as Andy because he comes across as this innocent man who sees no fault in his life. Yes he is a virgin as 40 years old in his life, but he doesn’t seem completely bothered by this as he leads, well what he calls, a very structured life. He has the standard affairs including making breakfast and watching TV with his neighbors. Sounds like a pretty decent life no? Well obviously with a title like “40-Year Old Virgin” we need a central love figure that will attract Andy’s interest.


Catherine Keener plays Trish and although she’s absent for many of the earlier scenes, she gives the film some sense of purpose in the later stages and changes the at first glance ‘sex-story’ into a true love-story. Once Keener’s character was introduced the film was given a huge step into the positive column. Even though her purpose if obvious, we can’t help but begin to feel for the two characters. Her challenge is to create a relationship we care about and we do end up caring. For Trish Andy isn’t simply a 40-Year Old loser Virgin, but rather a complex man that she wants to figure out.

Earlier scenes with Andy attempting to chat up women in clubs are amusing due to Carrell’s performance. Carrell, as mentioned earlier, is a real delight in this film. Take for example a later sequence where he must accompany Trish’s teenage daughter to a sex education class. The sequence, where this time he openly admits his virginity, is innovative and a particular highlight. Instead of this sequence becoming a standard stupid ‘let’s laugh at Andy’s misfortunes’, the scene comes off a true gem showing the quality of Carell.

Ultimately, the film can only go in one direction and it wouldn’t be spoiling things to reveal that Andy loses his cherry at the finale of the film. Given the title of the film, the film could have been a crude sex comedy with contempt for its characters (Even Carell admits this in the included PIP commentary). However “The 40-Year Old Virgin” is surprisingly funny and insightful. While the included ‘Unrated’ cut does feel a bit too long in some places, the film’s main purpose remains intact and we still end up caring for Andy. Fans of Carell or really funny comedy will enjoy this one.

Video Quality on this release is in full 1080p using the AVC MPEG-4 codec, in a 1.85:1 aspect ratio on a BD-50 Disc (50 gigabyte Blu-ray Disc). Color usage was great with crisp blues of the sky, dark blacks of the night and solid facial tones (although some of Carell’s facial tones truly showed how HD can make an image seem almost too ‘real’). Grain was pretty much absent only becoming noticeable in a few of the darker sequences (I noticed a bit here and there when Andy is racing back to his apartment after the poker game). The original Unrated SD release was plagued with a few problems (most notable was the blandest of the colors). This HD release improves those problems in a manner that fans will be pleased with.


Audio Quality on this release is presented in DTS-HD 5.1 Master Audio. As I just noticed, with the film being 90% dialogue, dialogue better come off in a intelligible manner. Luckily this is the case here. Never did the film’s dialogue become muddled or hard to understand (unless you count when the PIP was enabled). Surround usage wasn’t overly represented except during some of the club sequences when you could make out the song. I also thought that most of the effects felt kind of tinny not really ever becoming overly present. Bass was only present in the club sequences and even when it was present, it never became a force.


Bonus Materials are all presented in Standard Definition (480i/p) using the AVC codec and Dolby Digital 2.0 sound.


  • U-Control” is included which features Picture-In-Picture via “Bonus View” — requiring a “Profile 1.1Blu-ray Disc Player. In all honest, I found this one quite amusing. Even though the PIP is basically snips and clips from the included features, watching the film while hearing comments from Carell, Apatow, Rogen and others made the film feel a bit more important than it probably should be. Fans will enjoy watching this one (especially the bits where Apatow speaks on improvising with Carell and others).

  • BD-Live is included which (when enabled likely on street date) will allow you to connect to the internet via “Profile 2.0Blu-ray Disc Player and download new content. Stay tuned for more information on this soon.
  • Feature Audio Commentary with Judd Apatow: Here we are presented with a very delightful commentary track. The main talk featured the discussion of the film’s subject and where some of the tougher scenes to film were. I found it interesting just how many people where featured on this track, which resulted in a rare dull moment being found.
  • Deleted Scenes: We are given a handful of deleted scenes, some which are incorporated back into the film. The scenes did not really do that much for me, story wise. A good positive to the scenes were the available audio commentaries by Judd Apatow and Seth Rogan.
  • Waxing Doc: Take one guess what this special feature is about? Give up? This feature has to do with the waxing scene, which looks extremely painful. Definitely a feature that needs to be seen just to see how painful this truly is.
  • Date-A-Palooza: Now here is a feature that is pretty damn funny. The main premise involves many of the actors giving tips on speed dating with various types of women. A pretty funny feature.
  • My Dinner With Stormy: This feature can only be found on the Unrated version of The 40-Year Old Virgin. This feature involves Seth Rogan sitting down with adult actress Stormy Daniels. Both go back and forth asking each other questions with her flirting with the camera. Worth a quick watch, but don’t expect anything too amazing.
  • Gag-Reel: Just like any other gag reel here. Various clips are shown of the actors messing up on their lines and scenes. The really funny part of this particular Gag-Reel was the extension of the hilarious “You know how I know you’re gay?” Scene. Worth a watch just for this.
  • Video Diaries: This feature focuses on a series of video diaries director Judd Apatow kept while filming Virgin. Fans of the film will definitely enjoy this feature as it shows how funny, especially when he’s going off on rants, Apatow can be.
  • Auditions: Running extremely short, this one shows the auditions many of the cast members gave.
  • Raw Footage: This feature focuses mostly on Steve Carell. Included are the bits from the poker sequence, the waxing sequence and the bathtub sequence. While all the scenes play out the same in terms of visuals, the added bits of randomness make this one pretty funny.
  • Reel Comedy Roundtable: This Comedy Central special dealt with all the main participants from the film. All of the participants speak about what they felt the film was about and what they got from the film.
  • Cinemax Final Cut: This one serves as a basic Q&A sessions where the four main actors sit down and field a few questions.


Blu-ray Disc packaging:


Screenshots:

NOTE: The full-sized 1920×1080 files are in a .PNG file format and uncompressed. Bare with the slow loading times, keep in mind these files are at least 1MB (1 megabyte) in size each.

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  1. 12 Responses to “The 40-Year-Old Virgin – Blu-ray Disc Review”

  2. One of my favorite movies of all-time and my introduction to the geniuses that are Judd Apatow and Seth Rogen. Great review bro!

    By Justin Sluss on Sep 15, 2008

  3. Does this include both the RATED and UNRATED cuts? Also does this suffer the same EE that plagued the HD DVD and DVD versions?

    By GizmoDVD on Sep 15, 2008

  4. GizmoDVD: I’m guessing that it only contains the UNRATED cut (much like the original HD-DVD release that I reviewed back in the day). This does suck that Universal didn’t use “Seamless Branching” techniques similar to those used recently on “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” to deliver both versions (Theatrical and Unrated) of the film. As far as the question about Edge Enhancement you’ll have to await a reply from Brendan (or someone else who already has a copy) on that question. Thanks for the feedback and welcome to the site by the way!

    By Justin Sluss on Sep 15, 2008

  5. In doing an A/B comparison to the HD DVD, I didn’t notice as much EE in the original HD DVD release. Popping in the DVD, EE was a general issue. Not so much on the HD DVD and this new Blu-ray release.

    Thanks for the comment and if you have any other ? feel free to ask!

    By Brendan Surpless on Sep 15, 2008

  6. Ive been visiting you’re site for a while…first time asking a question but thanks for the welcome!

    Looks like Universal drop the Rated cut then as it was originally announced to be Rated and Unrated…huge disappointment.

    By GizmoDVD on Sep 15, 2008

  7. Hmm, so Knocked Up and Forgetting Sarah Marshall include both cuts, but 40 Year Old Virgin doesn’t? How disappointing. I won’t get copies of Knocked Up or 40 Year Old Virgin until early next week. Did get Halloween pack though.

    By Loys Johnson on Sep 17, 2008

  8. Updated the info to reflect both Rated and Unrated. I’ve been ultra busy and was working on Knocked Up and 40 Year Old at the same time and forgot to include this aspect of it.

    Don’t worry though both cuts are present!

    By Brendan Surpless on Sep 17, 2008

  9. All extras are in standard definition, not high definition.

    By Loys Johnson on Sep 24, 2008

  10. fixed… Brendan did the review here, not me ;)

    By Justin Sluss on Sep 24, 2008

  11. In fact just got my copies in yesterday. I’ve only had a chance to watch a bit of “Knocked Up” and it’s “U-Control” — So I hadn’t even looked at the standard bonus materials and noticed that he’d made a typo there.

    By Justin Sluss on Sep 24, 2008

  12. In fairness to Brendan he’s been extremely busy lately with his day job and such so I apologize for him on his behalf.

    By Justin Sluss on Sep 24, 2008

  13. This is an awesome title and the girl behind me thinks i cant spell right!

    By Chris on Dec 10, 2008

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