For a kick-off, we have one of Sly’s typically excellent and hugely open commentary tracks that goes into a lot of detail about the production. He talks about the script, the locations, the cast, the streamlining of the plot and the dialogue and, of course, about the action and the enormous damage that he, and the others, all received in the name of art. This is wide-ranging and thoroughly engaging. We hear about the difficulties of filming in the confines of a real ship, about working with Willis and Schwarzenegger, about the extensive violence and the stuntwork, the injuries and the constant attention to driving the plot forward. Although it is a shame that Statham’s full fight sequence on the basketball court was trimmed down to only a third of its original length, Stallone is quite right about why he omitted so much of it. His decision may rob us of some of the very thing we love most about the cockney bruiser, but it was definitely done for the right reasons. He is quite amusing when talking about Mickey Rourke’s character and his lack of screentime, explaining that the guy was fitting his performance in around his work on Iron Man II, and that since he looked identical to his mad Russki Death Machine you could basically pretend that Tool was the same person, just on his night-gig as a tattooist. Entertainment is guaranteed with Sly on fine, funny and self-deprecating form.
When you watch the film in Recon-Mode, you are treated to a comprehensive PiP track that boxes-out a portion of the screen and fills it with behind-the-scenes footage. Sometimes we get more than one box with a separate participant to guide us through, and sometimes we leave the film entirely and dip properly into some new material. The feature is utilised often and a great deal of new info is gleaned. Sly's commentary is drafted-in to cover some of the onscreen footage, although I'm sure that it sounded as though he was also providing some new chat, as well. Ahh, I'll have to go back and check on that just to make sure. Naturally a fair amount of the same ground is covered but Stallone and his production teams certainly seem to have planned things out. Together, they deliver fact and trivia and anecdote aplenty, but Stallone ensures that everything is carried out with a great sense of humour and that almost pseudo humility that he has become renowned for.
The magnificence of excess that is the now highly cherished 92-minute making-of, called Inferno, takes up the lion’s share of this extras package. Coming in four parts, but happily played as one big feature if you like, this is a terrific warts ‘n’ all documentary that boasts an all-access fly-on-the-wall type of approach. We can see Sly on-set or location and coming up with ideas – such as the hatch in the sea-plane gag. We witness script evolutions, rehearsals, camera set-ups, costumes and war-paint, and we hear on-set snippets from all the cast and a lot of the crew. By far the most entertaining part is the third section which, bwah-ha-harrrr, focusses on the fisticuffs and the stunt choreography for the big smackdown in the catacombs and, of course, the massive final fire-fight. We see Sly, having just found out that he only has two hours of prep before facing Steve Austin and not the two weeks he had banked on, as he watches the stunt template for what he has to do. Aye, there is blood, sweat and tears on the set. But, horror of horrors, Sly even has close-ups of the incredibly nasty injections he has put into his swollen and twisted ankles to speed up the healing process and allow him back on-set as soon as possible. Cheers, Sly. I was eating at the time. But the injuries mount up and we get to know Sly's doctor quite well with the repeated care that the star needs. Hell, Austin broke Sly's neck! This is basically the epitome of the modern filmmaker's consumer-savvy. Sly knows that we can't get enough of this and, thus, making a film for him now means that he actually making at least two films – with the other being this exhaustive behind-the-scenes documentary.
The might of this gung-ho project is further covered in the 25-minute Post Production Diaries. Here we have a glimpse at the sound editing, the looping of dialogue, the editing of the picture and the evolution of the score from Brian Tyler. Sly allows some conversations to be filmed, and we hear great and honest opinions from all those involved in these key areas. There is also a look at the test screening process and the score-card process that it involves. What is cool about this mini-doc is that Stallone pops up to host it from time to time with a concise and direct agenda that highlights what he was after – BIG sound effects!!! – and steers the direction of the piece. Far from being annoyingly involved with literally everything – it’s MY film and I’ll be in ALL the featurettes and documentaries and commentaries – he is a reassuring captain at the helm. I know that I am biased and I can also imagine that some more casual fans may even become a little cheesed-off with his omnipresence, but I love his total hands-on approach.
This release also features one Deleted Scene. This is an alternative take on Gunner’s introduction during the pirate rescue sequence. Dolph appears and tells a truly awful joke to the leader of the hostage-takers before blowing him in half. Quite honestly, Stallone was right to have rethought this scene because this variation just doesn’t work well at all.
45 minutes of footage of the Comic-Con panel that brought Sly together with the rest of his cast to much acclaim in San Diego July 2010. Hosted by Harry Knowles, from Aintitcoolnews, this is your typically irreverent crowd-pleasing Q & A frequently punctuated by wild whoops and cheers from the excited audience. Of course it is over-the-top, but damn it all, no fan of this stuff, these guys, or just of Stallone, wouldn't want to have been there to see this. To be honest, these guys – Sly, Dolph, Randy, Terry – are hysterical. The anecdotes are fast and fun, and the playful ribbing of one another is often exceptionally cute and clever. Listen out for the bit when Stallone addresses the area of on-set egotism. Daft and over-hyped, over-promoted back-slapping, but crazily addictive at the same time … and especially cool for the flash-flood appearance of Bruce Willis, who was apparently unscheduled.
As well as Liongate BD-Live, D-Box Motion Control (which would be awesome with this film) and a selection of trailers for The Expendables and as well as a slew of other hard-hitters from the cast of the film, this is a triple-disc set that also contains a DVD edition of the film and a digital copy.
This is a terrific all-round package that goes the extra mile in terms of behind-the-scenes material and all-access entertainment. No fan will be disappointed, that's for sure.