SEEING RED:
3 FRENCH VIGILANTE THRILLERS (1982-1984)
3-Disc Blu-ray Set
SHOT PATTERN (1982)
STREET OF THE DAMNED (1984)
BLACK LIST (1984)
Label: Fun City Editions
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated
Audio: French DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD WIdescreen (1.66.1) & (1.85:1)
Directors: Jean-Claude Missiaen, Alain Bonnot, Gilles Béhat
The films in Seeing Red: 3 French Vigilante Thrillers are action-filled tales of ordinary citizens enacting bloody revenge against violent criminals, released on this 3-disc set, marking the worldwide Blu-ray debuts for all three films.
aka Tir groupé
Label: Fun City Editions
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 86 Minutes 25 Seconds
Audio: French DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.66:1)
Director: Jean-Claude Missiaen
Cast: Gérard Lanvin, Véronique Jannot, Michel Constantin, Mario David, Steve Kalfa, Dominique Pinon, Janine Magnan, Pierre Londiche, Roland Blanche, Jean-Roger Milo
Carine (Véronique Jannot, Thieves After Dark) is senselessly killed by three murderous hoodlums on a train. Intelligent and well-acted this vigilante thriller is a bit light on the an actual vigilantism, but Lanvin gives a deeply affecting performance as the boyfriend consumed by his grief and determined to have his revenge on the killers, especially since detective Gagnon (Michel Constantin) and his men are taking quite a long time to solve the case. Antoine's gift of a cameo brooch that disappeared during Carine's murder proves a useful way to track down the murderous trio whom end up fencing it at a pawn shop, and eventually the cops and Antoine converge on the trio of cutthroats and there's shootout, with the armed Antoine taking matters into his own hands. I am not very knowledgeable about French cinema of this or any era to be honest, the only face that stuck out to me is one of the thugs played by Dominique Pinon (Delicatessen, City of the Lost Children), but I thought the cast was pretty terrific. I also liked the fragmentary style of the story, after the doomed-lover opening we experience Antoine and Carine's meetcute at the flea market and budding romance in flashbacks, all of which adds depth to the vigilante character and his motivations. It might not be action-packed but I thought it was quite an effective revenge thriller.
Special Features:
- Audio commentary by Travis Woods
- Archival Featurette with Writer/Director Jean-Claude Missiaen (3:56)
- Archival Featurette with Actor Gérard Lanvin (0:53)
- Original Ending with Director Commentary (3:14)
- Image Gallery (2:56)
- Theatrical Trailer (2:10)
aka Rue Barbare
Label: Fun City Editions
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 107 Minutes 27 Seconds
Audio: French DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD WIdescreen (1.85:1)
Directors: Gilles Béhat
Cast: Bernard Giraudeau, Christine Boisson, Jean-Pierre Kalfon, Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu, Corinne Dacla, Jean-Claude Van Damme, Michel Auclair, Jean-Pierre Sentier, Pierre Frag, Nathalie Courval, Hakim Gharem, Myriam Salvoldi, Harry Cleven, Thierry Carpentier
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary by Travis Woods
- Archival Interview with Writer/Director Gilles Béhat (12:37)
- Archival Interview with Actor Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu (16:21)
- Image Gallery (4:48)
- Teaser Trailer (1:04)
- Theatrical Trailer (2.20)
- Short Trailer (0:44)
BLACK LIST (1984)
aka Liste Noire
Label: Fun City Editions
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 90 Minutes 32 Seconds
Audio: French DTS-HD MA 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD WIdescreen (1.66:1)
Directors: Alain Bonnot
Cast: Annie Girardot, François Marthouret, Paul Crauchet, Bernard Gabay, Christian François, Gérard Sergue
I loved all three of these vigilante flicks, if I had to pick a favorite it would easily be Street of the Damned, I just loved the dystopian, pulpy vibe of it, that elevated it it a bit over the other flicks on the set. That said, these are all quite interesting revengers, each with its own unique and interesting characters and approaches to the material, which made marathoning all three back to back all the more pleasing.
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary by Walter Chaw
- Seeing Red Trailers (1:40)
- Image Gallery (2:37)
- Image Gallery (2:37)
- Reversible Sleeve of Artwork
- Embossed Slipcover
- 12-Page Illustrated Booklet with new essay by Barry Forshaw
- 12-Page Illustrated Booklet with new essay by Barry Forshaw
Audio/Video: All three films are making their worldwide Blu-ray premiers, and are being released in the U.S. for the first time ever on home video, licensed by Fun City Editions from Studio Canal. The film are presented in 1080p HD widescreen, with Shot Pattern and Black list presented in 1.66:1 and Street of the Damned in 1.85:1. The scans looks excellent, the sources look quite nice, colors are well-saturated, black levels are solid, contrast looking good. Audio on all three films come by way of French DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono with optional English subtitles, the tracks are clean and well-balanced, no issues to report.
Onto the extras we get Audio Commentaries by critic Travis Woods on Shot Pattern and Street of the Damned, and Critic Walter Chaw on Black List. Additional extras for Shot Pattern include a 4-min Archival Featurette with Writer/Director Jean-Claude Missiaen; a 1-min Archival Featurette with Actor Gérard Lanvin; the 3-min Original Ending with Director Commentary; 3-min Image Gallery; and a 2-min Theatrical Trailer. Other extras for Street of the Damned include a 13-min Archival Interview with Writer/Director Gilles Béhat; 16-min Archival Interview with Actor Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu; 5-min Image Gallery; 1-min Teaser Trailer; 2-min Theatrical Trailer; and a 44-sec Short Trailer. Black List gets 2-min Image Gallery plus a 2-min Seeing Red Trailer.
The 3-disc set arrives in a standard sized clear keepcase with a flipper tray housing the three discs, the Reversible Wrap features three artwork options for the films with the French titles, plus we get a Limited Edition Slipcover with front and back artwork by Luke Insect with embossed and spot-gloss features on it that looks cool. Tucked away inside is a Collectible Illustrated Booklet with new writing on all three film by way of Barry Forshaw 'Streets of the Damned: The French Crime Film, which is a terrific read, plus cast and crew information for each film. Both the Booklet and Slipcover are exclusive to the first-pressing, so get on it if you want 'em.
Seeing Red: Three French Vigilantes Thrillers (1982-1984) is a terrific 3-disc set, with all three obscure French revengers making their worldwide Blu-ray debuts with pleasing transfers and a solid set of archival extras and packaging ephemera, this is another top-notch set from Fun City Editions, highly recommended.
Buy it!
Screenshots from the Fun City Editions Blu-rays:
Shot Pattern (1982):
Street of the Damned (1984):
Black List (1984):