![]() ![]() It all seemed good enough.Īn interesting addition is the audio commentary, which isn’t the usual Funimation affair. I gave the dub a try, and apparently they have a continuity of cast between the games and the movie, although I wouldn’t know. I went with the Japanese and found it to be a mostly front heavy affair, needing a nudge on the volume to get to a decent level where the action and music make an impact. ![]() Manga supplies their usual DTS-HD MA soundtracks as opposed to Funimation’s Dolby TrueHD, and here we get 5.1 Surround for both English and Japanese. The image is presented in 1.78:1 widescreen 1080p, and is pretty much what you would expect from a Funimation sourced transfer, clear and sharp throughout, with strong atmospheric colours, and smooth animation, with just a hint of digital banding in darker scenes. But suddenly there’s another Witch abroad, and it looks like a Sage has returned too, the head of a church cult at the centre of mass suicides, and if that isn’t enough, Bayonetta suddenly has a kid to look after, a girl named Cereza who insists on calling her mummy, and Bayonetta isn’t the maternal type! The Disc Bayonetta: Bloody Fate is released on a single layer Blu-ray disc, authored locally by Manga Entertainment. Bayonetta has her hands full just dealing with the angels, and fending off a photographer named Luka, who keeps trying to prove that Bayonetta murdered his father. ![]()
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