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What doesn’t? The script (by Blayne Weaver and David H. Steinberg) relies too heavily on a “men are idiots” subversion that feels just as reductive as the original films’ “women are mysteries.” Also, the title Girls’ Rules is misleading; the “rules” are abandoned halfway through.
Low-frequency effects are modest—this isn’t an action movie—but there’s enough thump during musical montages. The most impressive audio moment comes during a chaotic house party sequence where bottles breaking, dialogue overlapping, and a booming subwoofer create a genuinely immersive soundstage. American Pie Presents - Girls- Rules -2020- Blu...
The Blu-ray is Region A locked (for North America), but it has been reported to work on most Region B and C players with proper firmware. The disc is pressed on a BD-25 (25 gigabytes) and utilizes AVC MPEG-4 encoding. How does the film look on Blu-ray? For a direct-to-video release, the 1080p transfer (presented in 1.78:1 aspect ratio) is surprisingly robust. Shot digitally with Arri Alexa cameras, the image is clean, sharp, and boasts vibrant color timing. Skin tones are natural, and the high school setting—locker rooms, house parties, and cafeterias—benefits from good depth of field. What doesn’t
Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 The Blu-ray features an English DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 track, as well as French and Spanish Dolby Digital 5.1 dubs. The lossless track is the clear winner. Dialogue is anchored firmly in the center channel, while the surround channels carry party ambiance, rear-channel jokes, and a pop-punk soundtrack (featuring artists like Hey Violet and The Regrettes). The disc is pressed on a BD-25 (25