A Million Ways To Die In The West 2014 720p B Better -
Here are some potential features for the movie "A Million Ways to Die in the West" (2014):
Scene Tags:
Letters often represent the initials or names of specific release groups that encoded the video file. a million ways to die in the west 2014 720p b better
- The Unrated Cut: The “B Better” version almost exclusively contains the Unrated cut of the film. This adds roughly 4 minutes of footage, including a more graphic version of the “sheep getting launched by a bull” gag, extended dialogue between Albert and his best friend Edward (Giovanni Ribisi), and a nastier version of the diarrhea scene. These missing beats restore the film’s R-rated rhythm.
- Corrected Audio Sync: Early 1080p releases suffered from a 200ms audio desync during the third act (specifically the Nero scene). The “B Better” encode, known for its meticulous A/V sync checks, corrected this.
- The "Better" Color Grading: The theatrical 720p web-dl was notoriously washed out. The “B Better” release used a Blu-ray source that emphasized the spaghetti western palette—golden hour yellows, deep blood reds, and the dusty browns of Monument Valley. For a film shot by Michael Barrett (Ted, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang), this color fidelity is essential.
Production Value
: Visually, the film is stunning, featuring crisp widescreen cinematography filmed in locations like Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico. The Bad: Humor and Pacing Here are some potential features for the movie
While the 2014 release was met with mixed critical reception, time has been kind to this absurd love letter to the Spaghetti Western. Whether you are catching it in high-definition Blu-ray quality or a crisp 720p rip, the film offers a unique blend of MacFarlane’s signature animation-style humor transplanted into a live-action setting that looks genuinely stunning. The Unrated Cut: The “B Better” version almost
- Naked Gun-style anachronisms (a pharmacy selling “non-alcoholic beer,” a town fair with a “guess your weight” booth).
- Brutally funny death montages — true to the title.
- Cameos (Doc Brown from Back to the Future, a musical number from Alan Jackson, and a surprising post-credits scene).
Seth MacFarlane
One of the strongest elements of the film is its incredible A-list cast, many of whom are playing wildly against type: as Albert Stark Charlize Theron as Anna Barnes-Leatherwood Liam Neeson as Clinch Leatherwood Amanda Seyfried as Louise Neil Patrick Harris as Foy Giovanni Ribisi as Edward Sarah Silverman as Ruth
A Million Ways to Die in the West
Released in 2014, was Seth MacFarlane's second live-action directorial effort, following the massive success of Ted . The film was born from an inside joke between MacFarlane and his writers while watching the 1968 Western Hang 'Em High . They began riffing on how incredibly dangerous and depressing life in the American West actually would have been for a "normal" person. 🐎 Hidden Gems & Trivia
- Charlize Theron plays against type as Anna, the sharp-shooting love interest. Her chemistry with MacFarlane is genuinely charming, and she commits to the physical comedy with a fearlessness that elevates the material.
- Neil Patrick Harris is perfectly cast as the foppish mustachioed Foy, allowing for some of the film’s most visually gags (most notably the elaborate "ice block" scene).
- Liam Neeson leans into his "tough guy" persona as the villainous Clinch Leatherwood, playing the straight man with just enough menace to be a threat, but enough self-awareness to be funny.