Best Blurays IconBest Blurays
Cast
/
Craig E. Dunn

Craig E. Dunn

1 Film

Craig E. Dunn

1 Included Film

Craig E. Dunn Is a former American Actor, Stuntman and Martial artist. A master of the Aikdo martial arts style and former student of Martial Arts Master and Actor Steven Seagal with whom he had opened up a dojo with in Taos, New Mexico called Ten Shin Bu Gei Gakuen (Ten Shin School of Martial Arts) 1981. Dunn has performed stunt work and appeared in several of Seagal's films including Above The Law (1988), Hard To Kill (1990), Out for Justice (1991), Under Siege (1992), Under Siege 2: Dark Territory (1995) and Executive Decision (1995). In most of his appearances he often portrayed a villainous character engaging in combat with his former Sensei including Hard to Kill were he portrays a thug attacking Seagal's character Mason storm at a convenience store.

Under Siege poster
UHD Blu-ray
Best English-Friendly:

Arrow 4K Blu-ray

Best Video:

Arrow 4K Blu-ray  see caps

Geoff D impressions 

It's weird. Brightly lit scenes have zero grain. They look plenty detailed and not at all waxy and lifeless, but there's no grain. Darker scenes have a fine layer of it as befits the general rule of thumb with film. Either they shot this on the 50-speed EXR stock of the day - virtually grainless in the right conditions - or it's been expertly 'grain managed'. I say 'expertly' becuz there's no trailing artefacts, no sticky grain that I can see, it's some of the best such treatment I've ever seen. And IF it has been I can only think the edict came down from the director himself.

Best Audio:

Arrow 4K Blu-ray omitted the original 5.1 track for a 2.0 and Atmos.US DVD has the DD5.1For Stereo track: Warner Home Video JPN LaserDisc [NJWL-12420]

Under Siege poster
UHD Blu-ray
English-Friendly:

Arrow 4K Blu-ray

Video:

Arrow 4K Blu-ray  see caps

Geoff D impressions 

It's weird. Brightly lit scenes have zero grain. They look plenty detailed and not at all waxy and lifeless, but there's no grain. Darker scenes have a fine layer of it as befits the general rule of thumb with film. Either they shot this on the 50-speed EXR stock of the day - virtually grainless in the right conditions - or it's been expertly 'grain managed'. I say 'expertly' becuz there's no trailing artefacts, no sticky grain that I can see, it's some of the best such treatment I've ever seen. And IF it has been I can only think the edict came down from the director himself.

Audio:

Arrow 4K Blu-ray omitted the original 5.1 track for a 2.0 and Atmos.US DVD has the DD5.1For Stereo track: Warner Home Video JPN LaserDisc [NJWL-12420]

1 film

Privacy PolicyAbout

Made with ❤️ 📀 by vanshady