Mar 162022
 

On the 3rd Day is a supernatural-horror film coming out of Argentina and stars Mariana Anghileri and Gerardo Romano. The Blu-ray is available from Shout Factory on March 29th.

 

 

On the 3rd Day
(2021)


Genre(s): Horror, Supernatural
Shout Factory| NR – 85 min. – $22.98 | March 29, 2022

Date Published: 03/16/2022 | Author: The Movieman


MOVIE INFO:
Director: Daniel de la Vega
Writer(s): Gonzalo Ventura (novel ‘3 Days’); Alberto Fasce and Gonzalo Ventura (written by)
Cast: Mariana Anghileri, Gerardo Romano, Lautaro Delgado, Osvaldo Santoro, Diego Cremonesi


DISC INFO:
Features: Trailer
Slip Cover: Yes
Digital Copy: No
Formats Included: Blu-ray
Number of Discs: 1


Audio: English Dubbed (DTS-HD MA 5.1), English Dubbed (DTS-HD MA 2.0)
Video: 1080p/Widescreen 2.39
Subtitles: English SDH
Disc Size: 26.07 GB
Total Bitrate: 40.17 Mbps
Codecs: MPEG-4 AVC
Region(s): A


 


PLOT SYNOPSIS


While on a trip with her young son, Cecilia (MARIANA ANGHILERI) has a car accident. Three days later, she finds herself wandering a lonely road with no sign of her child — and no memory of what happened since the crash. Cecilia’s desperate search for her son leads her on a wrenching and tumultuous journey to face off against a religious fanatic who holds the shocking key to it all.

 

SPECIAL FEATURES – ½/5


This release comes with a matted slip cover. The only feature is the film’s Trailer (2:17).

 


VIDEO – 4½/5, AUDIO – 4½/5


On the 3rd Day is presented with a 2.39 widescreen aspect ratio and a 1080p high-definition transfer. This is a standard looking picture for a modern day made movie, detail is well defined throughout while colors are more on the muted side considering not only the amount of nighttime scenes but the overall tone with a demonic possession being central to the plot.

The disc comes with both a 5.1 and 2.0 DTS-HD Master Audio tracks. On the plus side, the sound does come through with good clarity and there is some okay depth. On the other hand, both of these tracks are the English dubbed versions so you get some distracting and quite frankly poor dubbing in numerous spots. While I don’t mind there being a dubbed track for those who don’t want to read subtitles, I’m not sure why the original Argentine Spanish language would’ve been an option as I would’ve preferred to hear the voices as originally intended and recorded. But I guess the dubbed dialogue does come across with good clarity, so there’s that.


 

 

 

Check out some more 1080p screen caps by going to page 2. Please note, these do contain spoilers.

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