Hart Bochner
4 Films
Hart Bochner
4 Included Films

Hart Matthew Bochner (born October 3, 1956) is a Canadian film actor, screenwriter, director, and producer. Bochner was born in Toronto, Ontario, the son of Ruth (née Roher), a concert pianist, and actor Lloyd Bochner. Bochner appeared in such films as Islands in the Stream (1977), Breaking Away (1979), Terror Train (1980), Rich and Famous (1981), Supergirl (1984) and Die Hard (1988). He portrayed a cold-blooded killer in Apartment Zero (1988) and also starred in Urban Legends: Final Cut (2000). Among the films he has directed are PCU and High School High. He also starred in a key role as Byron Henry in the 1988 ABC miniseries War and Remembrance. He is a board member of the Environmental Media Awards. He starred as Zach, boyfriend of Molly Kagan (Debra Messing), on USA Network's The Starter Wife. Description above from the Wikipedia article Hart Bochner, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia

Director: Jeannot Szwarc

Director: Jeannot Szwarc

Director: John McTiernan

Director: John McTiernan

WB 4K Blu-ray, caveat: the 1.33:1 ratio is NOT included. HDR is sometimes bright.
WB LaserDisc: original Dolby Stereo mix direct copy
Warner Archive Blu-ray:original mix new transfer, a tad clearer but not quite as rich sounding
4K Blu-ray has various issues holding it back despite the new scan. No Academy ratio version is included. The new remix audio is louder, harsher and nowhere near as good as the original. The original option on the 4K Blu-ray is processed and sounds lackluster. The LaserDisc sounds best by far with the Warner Archive Blu-ray coming in a close second.

WB 4K Blu-ray, caveat: the 1.33:1 ratio is NOT included. HDR is sometimes bright.
WB LaserDisc: original Dolby Stereo mix direct copy
Warner Archive Blu-ray:original mix new transfer, a tad clearer but not quite as rich sounding
4K Blu-ray has various issues holding it back despite the new scan. No Academy ratio version is included. The new remix audio is louder, harsher and nowhere near as good as the original. The original option on the 4K Blu-ray is processed and sounds lackluster. The LaserDisc sounds best by far with the Warner Archive Blu-ray coming in a close second.


4 films