Ted: Extended Edition

Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane takes on Hollywood with his teddy bear antics

Smash hit comedy Ted stars Mark Wahlberg as John, an amiable slacker whose best friend just happens to be a teddy bear that he wished to life when he was a kid (voiced by MacFarlane in full-on Peter Griffin mode). Which would be fine, if continually blowing off work to get stoned with a stuffed toy wasn't the kind of thing that might spoil things with the love of your life (Mila Kunis).

With an immature man-child as its central character, a talking animal as his best friend, endless pop culture references and un-PC gags, it's safe to say that Ted isn't exactly mining new territory for Seth MacFarlane. It's still very enjoyable, though, and totes a hilarious cameo from 1980s Flash Gordon Sam Jones.

Picture: Universal may have a hit-and-miss track record with its back catalogue titles, but it treats its contemporary movies with care. Ted's Blu-ray does feature a colour palette and contrast that's pushed a little hot at times, but elsewhere the AVC 1.78:1 1080p encode provides an accurate representation of the intended look of the film and impresses with its fine detailing and exquisite textures.
Picture rating: 4/5

Audio: Ted's DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 soundtrack doesn't push the boat out when it comes to employment of your surround speakers. Despite the occasional flourish – such as the whoosh of rockets from the rear to the front of the soundstage at the end of Chapter 11's Flash Gordon fantasy – the majority of the mix is firmly focused on the front left/centre/right soundstage.

The good news is that there's plenty of heft in the bass (when required), natural dialogue reproduction and glorious musicality. It's just a shame it doesn't try a little harder to live up to its multichannel nature.
Audio rating: 4/5

Extras: As well as including both the 106-minute theatrical cut and 112-minute 'unrated cut' of the film itself, Universal's Blu-ray release also finds room for a fun bunch of extra features.

The actual production of the movie is covered by a commentary track (on the theatrical version only) featuring Seth MacFarlane, co-writer Alex Sulkin and Mark Wahlberg, a six-minute featurette about shooting a fight scene and a worthwhile 25-minute Making of… doc that's split into three sections (A Guy, A Girl and a Teddy Bear; Doing it Live; and A MacFarlane Set).

Also on offer are 15 deleted scenes, an 11-minute reel of alternate takes, a six-minute gag reel and an UltraViolet digital copy of the film.
Extras rating: 3/5

We say: A solid Blu-ray outing for one of 2012's rudest, crudest and funniest comedies

Universal Pictures, All-region BD, £25 Approx, On sale now
HCC VERDICT: 4/5

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