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Sin City 2: A Dame to Kill For Blu-ray

Film · Lionsgate · Affiliate

Robert Rodriguez's hyper-stylized noir sequel delivers on the visual promise of film Sin City 2 — high-contrast Blu-ray transfer, strong ensemble, and a presentation that rewards the format.

Travis
Travis Owner & Reviewer
4.5/5
$12.99 Price at time of review
Updated Apr 2026

TL;DR Summary

4.5/5 Excellent

Pros

  • High-contrast Blu-ray transfer faithfully renders the film's stark monochromatic palette
  • Eva Green's performance as Ava Lord is a genuine standout in a strong ensemble
  • Anthology structure makes it accessible as a standalone entry, not just a sequel
  • Competitively priced as a physical media collectible alongside the original

Cons

  • Bonus features are thin — featurettes cover the basics but don't go deep
  • No 4K UHD release available; committed home theater setups may feel underserved
  • The nine-year gap between films is occasionally visible in tonal inconsistencies

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Extended Observations

Robert Rodriguez's hyper-stylized noir sequel delivers on the visual promise of film Sin City 2 — high-contrast Blu-ray transfer, strong ensemble, and a presentation that rewards the format.

Robert Rodriguez and Frank Miller took a decade to follow up their 2005 original, and that gap is worth keeping in mind when sitting down with A Dame to Kill For. This is not a film trying to reinvent the wheel — it's a film committed, almost stubbornly, to extending the visual language of Basin City deeper into Miller's source material. That clarity of purpose matters.

The Blu-ray transfer is where this release earns its keep. The film's monochromatic palette — splashed with isolated reds, yellows, and greens — translates exceptionally well to the format. Contrast is tight, shadow detail is preserved, and the deliberate artificiality of the digital-backlot photography looks intentional rather than cheap at this resolution. It's the kind of transfer that reminds you why physical media still has a place alongside streaming.

The ensemble is worth noting. Eva Green commands every scene she occupies as Ava Lord, and Josh Brolin steps into Clive Owen's role from the original with enough presence to make the recasting feel earned rather than awkward. Joseph Gordon-Levitt's original storyline — not drawn from Miller's comics — gives the anthology structure a fresh entry point for viewers who know the source material well.

Bonus features are present but lean: a handful of behind-the-scenes featurettes covering the visual effects pipeline and Rodriguez's production method. Fans of the first film will find enough here to satisfy curiosity about how the sequel was assembled, even if the extras don't run especially deep.

For the collector who already owns the original on Blu-ray, this is a natural companion piece. It fits the shelf, it plays well on a calibrated display, and at its current price point, the value proposition is straightforward. The right buyer is someone who appreciated what the first film did aesthetically and wants to see that world extended — not someone expecting the sequel to surpass it.

Our Verdict

Robert Rodriguez's hyper-stylized noir sequel delivers on the visual promise of film Sin City 2 — high-contrast Blu-ray transfer, strong ensemble, and a presentation that rewards the format.

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