Product Details
- An MVD Exclusive
- Version: Limited Edition
- SKU: FCE024ABC
- Format: Blu-ray
- UPC: 760137153627
- Street Date: 05/07/24
- PreBook Date: 04/02/24
- Label: Fun City Editions »
- Genre: Mystery/Thriller
- Run Time: 278 mins
- Number of Discs: 3
- Audio: STEREO
- Year of Production: 1982
- Region Code: 0
- Box Lot: 30
- Territory: NORTH AMERICA
- Language: French
Cast & Crew
- Actors:
- Bernard Giraudeau as Chet
- Annie Girardot as Jeanne
- Gérard Lanvin as Antoine
- Director: Jean-Claude Missiaen
- Director: Alain Bonnot
- Director: Gilles Béhat
Product Assets
Seeing Red: 3 French Vigilante Thrillers
The films in Seeing Red: 3 French Vigilante Thrillers are action-filled tales of ordinary citizens enacting bloody revenge against violent criminals.
- List Price: $64.95
- Your Price: $64.95
- In Stock: 751
You must login to place orders.
A Paris flea market vendor (Gérard Lanvin) is transformed into a vigilante after his fiancée is murdered by three vicious thugs on a commuter train in Jean-Claude Missiaen's Shot Pattern (Tir Groupé, 1982). As the revenge-minded young man tracks the killers, a veteran police inspector leads a parallel investigation. This lean, intelligently-crafted thriller packs an emotional punch, largely due to Lanvin's superlative performance, for which he received a César Award nomination for Best Actor.
American crime writer David Goodis' novels have been adapted into numerous films, including Truffaut's Shoot the Piano Player, Delmer Daves' Dark Passage and Jacques Tourneur's Nightfall. For Street of the Damned (Rue Barbare, 1984), Gilles Béhat transposes Goodis' Street of the Lost from 1950s Philadelphia to a desolate, almost post-apocalyptic Paris suburb. There, no one dares challenge crime boss Hagen, who rules his turf with an iron fist. That includes his former friend Chet (Bernard Giraudeau), who vows to keep to himself in order to protect his loved ones. But Hagen keeps pushing his buttons...and Chet can only stand for so much before he explodes. Resembling a dark, offbeat comic book, Street of the Damned evokes films like Streets of Fire and Mad Max.
Three teenage Parisian punks are duped by a crime syndicate into committing a bank robbery that will distract the authorities while the seasoned crooks hijack an armored truck across town in Alain Bonnot's Black List (Liste Noire, 1984). Disaster ensues and two of the youngsters are killed, including the estranged daughter of widowed auto repair shop owner Jeanne Dufour (Annie Girardot). A grieving Jeanne ignores her own fear, as well as the law, and sets out to eliminate all of those responsible for her daughter's death. Groundbreaking in its portrayal of a female vigilante, the film is stylish and violent and features a powerhouse performance from Girardot as a woman who has passed the breaking point.
Media
Bonus Materials
- Audio commentary by Travis Woods (Street of the Damned)
- Audio commentary by Walter Chaw (Black List)
- Audio commentary by Travis Woods (Shot Pattern)
- Trailers
- Image Galleries
- Archival interviews with cast and directors
- Booklet with new essay by Barry Forshaw
Sales Points
- Limited edition slipcover with front & back artwork.
- Worldwide Blu-ray premieres
- None of these films have been officially released in the U.S. previously
- Actors include: César Award-winning and nominated French stars Annie Girardot, Bernard Giraudeau and Gérard Lanvin, as well as Michel Constantin, Dominique Pinon, Véronique Jannot, Christine Boisson, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu.
Press Quotes
'Shot Pattern moves like lightning. There's a style on view, the likes of which we have not seen since Jean-Jacques Beineix's Diva. - Miami Herald
—Miami Herald
'Street of the Damned is a cross between The Warriors and Mad Max for its almost post-apocalyptic atmosphere.'
—Les Chroniques de Cliffhanger & Co
'Black List is a tense, well-paced action thriller. An enjoyable noir-tinted fantasy, a veritable feast for all Annie Girardot fans.'
—FrenchFilms.org
'Street of the Damned is hard-hitting and violent...[culminating with] a particularly gripping fight.'
—Cambridge Evening News
'Gérard Lanvin in Shot Pattern is France's version of the Clint Eastwood-Charles Bronson vigilante hero.'
—The Daily Progress (Charlottesville)