Anthem BLX 200 review

Anthem is making a welcome return to the UK with the release of its debut Blu-ray player

Anthem BLX 200
Anthem's design is strangely old-school

TechRadar Verdict

It may be a basic player, but if offers superb video and audio performance

Pros

  • +

    Picture quality

  • +

    Hi-fi audio

  • +

    Robust and build quality

Cons

  • -

    Remote

  • -

    No built-in Wi-Fi or dongle option

  • -

    Insufficient built-in BD Live memory

  • -

    Lack of multimedia services

  • -

    No 7.1 line outs

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At a time when we're slowly but surely seeing brand names disappearing from the AV high street, it's refreshing to be faced with a product wearing one that we don't often see in the UK: Anthem. But its heritage couldn't be more respectable as it comes from the same long running Canadian stable as Paradigm speakers.

Anthem is already established in the North American home theatre market, with ranges of acclaimed AV amps, processors and pre-amps. But the BLX 200 is the brand's first Blu-ray player.

Anthem 2

Its audio is imperious, too, if you can get past the lack of multichannel analogue outputs. Film soundtracks sound fluid, dynamic, and immersive, whether in lossless or lossy DTS/ Dolby Digital, and there's an almost inexplicable sense of clarity that you get with genuine 'hi-fi ' Blu-ray decks.

Tech tests may show an unexpectedly high analogue audio jitter figure, but as anthem product manager Nick Platsis told us, the analogue outs are provided mainly as a 'Zone 2' option, and aren't designed for critical listening applications.

The BLX 200 is a warm, engaging player of CDs, too, again justifying the price tag to those rating performance ahead of all else. For us at HCC, the shortage of multimedia panache makes it impossible for us to award this deck a higher mark than four.

And there will doubtless be people nowadays who just won't countenance spending £600 on a blu-ray player that doesn't offer 3D playback. But while it's old-school in some ways, the BLX 200 is a reminder that the traditional values of outstanding audio and video performance never go out of fashion.

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John Archer
AV Technology Contributor

John has been writing about home entertainment technology for more than two decades - an especially impressive feat considering he still claims to only be 35 years old (yeah, right). In that time he’s reviewed hundreds if not thousands of TVs, projectors and speakers, and spent frankly far too long sitting by himself in a dark room.