The primary lens takes sharp photos with true colors and details that hold up well. It's also excellent at depth of field in portraits and macro-style shots. Unlike the Pixel 3A and many of our favorite Android phones, there is no Night mode, though there is a Scene mode that will lighten nighttime shots. Unfortunately, the results are not the best.
Fingerprints and Sound
The Xperia 1 has a USB-C port at the bottom. Its power button and volume toggles are both on the right side, as is the fingerprint reader.
The fingerprint reader was hit or miss for me, due to its location. It's in a comfortable spot while you're holding the phone, and great when it works. Unfortunately, at least a third of the time it didn't respond at all. But hey, at least that Gorilla Glass coating doesn't pick up fingerprints as you wildly stab at the side of your phone.
One surprise was the speakers, which are actually pretty good. They really better be in a phone chasing a cinematic experience. And no, they aren't that good. If you're serious about your movies, you'll want to pair this phone with a decent set of headphones, which can help make movie watching fairly immersive, David Lynch not withstanding. At least, until your vibrating phone interrupts it all.
Sony added its Dynamic Vibration feature to the Xperia 1, which vibrates the phone with the song (or movie). Who wants this is unclear to me, and like WIRED editor Jeffrey Van Camp said, it's a ridiculous gimmick in his review of the Xperia XZ2. Instead of pulling you into a good film, it yanks you out of the music or movie to remind you that, yes, there's a phone in your hand. We hope this feature will go the way of Sony's Memory Stick.
What you won't get is a headphone jack. Ironically, Sony includes a pair of earbuds—some of the worst I've used—but no jack. Instead you get a USB-C headphone adapter, because life did not have enough dongles already. If you end up getting the Xperia 1, grab yourself a pair of Bluetooth headphones to go with it.
A Long Screen Isn't Enough
It's tough to recommend this $950 phone. On one hand, there's really nothing terribly wrong with the Xperia 1, but it also isn't the best at anything. It's a phone that's fun to test, great if you get one as a gift, but just too expensive to justify buying. If you really want to create the next cinematic masterpiece, skip Sony's phone, grab a Pixel 3A, and put the $550 you save toward the Sony Alpha 7S. It will take you places, not hold you back.