Let me start by saying this: Seven in 4K is *stunning*. The gritty, rain-soaked visuals pop like never before—every fingerprint, every drop of sweat feels uncomfortably real. The tonal range is perfection, preserving Fincher's bleak aesthetic while adding crisp detail. It's like seeing the film for the first time again.
But oh, that packaging. Whoever designed this 'case' clearly never tried to remove the disc. It's wedged so tightly into cardboard that you'll either smudge the disc with fingerprints or risk tearing the glued seams (mine arrived with a minor rip). I ended up storing the disc separately—a shame, because the artwork is gorgeous.
The audio downgrade from 7.1 to 5.1 is puzzling, but it still delivers Morgan Freeman's narration with spine-tingling clarity. The infamous 'head in a box' scene? The bass rumbles your bones just right.
Worth noting: This isn't a casual rewatch. Twenty-five years later, that ending still left me staring at my screen for minutes afterward. The 4K transfer makes John Doe's meticulous horrors even more visceral—maybe too much so for my takeout dinner.
Final verdict? A must-own for fans, but treat that packaging like evidence at a crime scene: handle with extreme caution.