I believe Frank Miller's Sin City maybe one of the finest films of the last decade. The fabulous cast (too many to list here), all put in some of the strongest performances of their careers, helped by a script which although sounding cliched, is strangely fresh and imaginative at the same time. Factor in the glorious visuals (beautifully composed in black and white with occasional colour keys), and the result is a mind-blowing and hypnotic treat. The movie's ace card is its story telling though; a finely crafted weave of overlapping circumstances and characters that brings the brutality of Sin City "colourfully" to life. And brutal it is too, sadistic even, although it does at least tend to be the villains that endure the more grisly fates - morality is very black and white in the world of Sin City.
There has been much praise of this disk's image quality, and it is top notch; bursting with minute detail, deep blacks and satisfying contrast. However, the DVD is also stunning, and those wishing to upgrade to BRD with smaller HD screens may only notice minor improvements I think. Sound quality is high on the DVD too, but here the BRD is much more improved; bass goes deep and surround elements are accurately placed. Bruce Willis' climatic beating of the Yellow Fiend sounds as if it's actually happening in your living room. Of course if you do not already have the excellent DVD, you'd be better off purchasing the Blu-Ray.
I was a little bit disappointed with the second disk though, which I expected to contain an extended and uncut version of the film in its entirety. What you actually get is the film re-cut into separate episodes (including titles), each one concentrating on a single story thread from the Movie. I don't think it works very well like this, as the original film's greatest strength is how the Character's lives and situations mesh seamlessly into one another, bringing their complex society to life. There are some new scenes, but they don't add much in my opinion. I can't see myself ever watching Sin City in this way again I'm afraid. The disk does also contain an exhaustive library of informative and engaging docs though, covering such subjects as costumes, cars and other props used in the film, with plenty of contributions from the film-makers and even guest director Quentin Tarantino. You also have two commentaries on the main disk, with Tarantino making an appearance again, and a rather strange audio track with audience reactions from an early test screening. The animated menus on both disks are also worth mentioning, they're the best I've ever seen.