Point Break (1991)

I’ve been waxing lyrical recently on some critically revered flicks and their rare confluences of casting, writing and execution to form classics for the ages. But it’s not just drama masterpieces that spawn a classic. If those elements are present, even the most critically ignored genres, such as horror and action, those kinds of films can also join that very short list. And in 1991, Kathryn Bigelow delivered an action film that did exactly that.

"knows what it is, executes it at the highest level and lands with a stunning effective end product."


With a taut script by W. Peter Iliff (so taut that it was xeroxed a decade later into The Fast and the Furious), stunning photography by Donald Peterman and a stellar cast, led by Patrick Swayze and the nicest guy in Hollywood, Keanu Reeves, Point Break tells the story of rookie FBI agent, Johnny Utah (Reeves). He goes undercover as a surfer dude to find a group of masked bank robbers his new partner, Pappas (Gary Busy), suspects are surfers. He befriends blonde bohemian Bodhi (Swayze) and his group and gets sucked into their hedonistic, carefree lifestyle, going as far as to fall in love with Bohdi’s ex, Tyler (Lori Petty). With a hilarious director (John C. McGinley) breathing down his neck, and more banks getting fleeced, the shit really hits the fan when Utah and his men arrest the wrong gang, and he discovers that Bodhi and his gang are the real bad guys—and they have his girl.Point Break (1991)

The plot is fairly simple, but the characters engage and grip you immediately. The chemistry between Swayze and Reeves is electric. The entire cast elevates every role from formulaic to memorable. The action is kinetic, unrelenting and thrilling. Bodhi exposes pseudo-spiritual platitudes, but I’ll be damned if you don’t start buying into them. It really does make him charismatic and dangerous, in that cult leader sort of way. There is great humour that brings levity before the storm. The momentum of the flick escalates effectively, delivering humour, romance, bromance and real danger right up until the end.

This was, by far, one of the greatest action flicks of the 1990s (one of three to star Reeves, no less). The less said about the god-awful remake the better. Fast and the Furious literally stole the plot of this film and went on to a litany of unending sequels, but neither it nor the insipid remake can hold a candle to the magic in the bottle of the original.

Point Break knows what it is, executes it at the highest level and lands with a stunning effective end product. Absolute gold.

5/5 stars



Point Break (1991)

Point Break (1991)

4k details divider

4k UHD4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray / SteelBook / Limited Edition

Home Video Distributor: Shout Factory
Available on Blu-ray
- July 2, 2024
Screen Formats: 2.39:1
Subtitles
: English SDH
Video:
Dolby Vision; HDR10
Audio:
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1; English: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0
Discs: 4K Ultra HD; Blu-ray Disc; Two-disc set
Region Encoding: 4K region-free; blu-ray locked to Region A

Hang ten and hang tough, Johnny. Rookie FBI agent Johnny Utah is learning to ride the waves. His mission: infiltrate a group of extreme surfers who may be the bank robbers known as the Ex-Presidents, and whose MO includes wearing masks of former White House denizens. Keanu Reeves portrays Johnny, Patrick Swayze plays charismatic thrill seeker Bodhi, and Oscar-winning director Kathryn Bigelow delivers an adrenaline rush of gnarly rides, skydives and danger in Point Break!

VIDEO

SUPERB! Shout Factory hit a home run with this new 2160p 4K scan of an inter-positive. HDR takes this presentation into the stratosphere, high above all previous releases. The DOLBY Vision/HDR10 colours are bolder, warmer and in many cases spectacular. Contrast and delineation are really effective (there is a new sense of threatening dimension in all the skydiving scenes). Shadows and highlights really pop in this print. Flesh tones are natural, for the most part, leaning heavier into warm tones than the past, but with finer detail showing off the heat of the summer. DNR is carefully applied and consistent, retaining grain structure (thus detail) awesomely. It doesn’t get much better than this.

AUDIO

Well, as always, I will have a sook about not availing the use of a UHD disc for a new 7.1 mix. Having got that out of the way, this reused DTS-HD 5.1 mix is about as good as it gets. Replete with heavy base and stunningly immersive directionality, you feel the waves curling around you. You leap in excitement at the sound effects, from the awesome foot chase to the gunfire and explosions. Dialogue is centred, scenes specific (it sounds like Swayze is talking under a Reagan mask or in an opened aircraft) and clean. They can (and probably should) argue that this didn’t need the extra two overheads but I still wanted to hear it.

Supplements:

Commentary:

  • None

Special Features:

I mean, at least there’s the 4K restoration.

DISC ONE (4K UHD):

  • 4K Restoration Of The Film From An Interpositive
  • In Dolby Vision (HDR 10 Compatible)
  • Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1, 2.0

DISC TWO (BLU-RAY):

  • 4K Restoration Of The Film From An Interpositive
  • Additional Scenes
  • Four Featurettes: “It’s Make Or Break,” “Ride The Wave,” Adrenaline Junkies,” And “On Location: Malibu”
  • Still Gallery
  • Theatrical Trailer

4k rating divider

  Movie 5/5 stars
  Video  5/5 stars
  Audio 4/5 stars
  Extras 3/5 stars

Composite Blu-ray Grade

4/5 stars


Film Details

Point Break (1991)

MPAA Rating: R.
Runtime:
122 mins
Director
: Kathryn Bigelow
Writer:
Rick King; W. Peter Iliff
Cast:
Patrick Swayze; Keanu Reeves; Gary Busey
Genre
: Action | Crime
Tagline:
Point Break: 100% Pure Adrenaline!
Memorable Movie Quote: "You crossed the line. People trusted you and they died. You gotta' go down."
Theatrical Distributor:
Twentieth Century Fox
Official Site: https://shoutfactory.com/products/point-break-limited-edition-steelbook-exclusive-poster
Release Date:
July 12, 1991
DVD/Blu-ray Release Date:
July 2, 2024.
Synopsis: An F.B.I. Agent goes undercover to catch a gang of surfers who may be bank robbers.

Art

Point Break (1991)