97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

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Finch
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97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#1 Post by Finch » Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:20 am

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The hardboiled genre of crime fiction evolved from the mystery crime novels of the early 20th century - closely associated with the US pulp magazines, these cynical and unsentimental stories of desperate criminals and social corruption were both influenced by and an influence on the golden era of film noir.

As their popularity waned in the US, the hardboiled genre remained hugely popular and relevant throughout the 1960s and 70s in France, thanks to the successful Serie Noire imprint and a succession of new translations. In Alain Corneau’s early films, he sought to continue the noir tradition in his native France, and was both directly and indirectly inspired by titans of hardboiled genre, including Kenneth Fearing and Jim Thompson. A heady combination of classic noir and 70s grit, these three darkly thrilling films are vastly underrated and important works in the canon of crime cinema.

In Police Python 357, Yves Montand (The Wages of Fear) plays a tough cop who, when his lover is found murdered, finds himself implicated in her death and in a battle of wits with a powerful rival, in the second screen adaptation of Kenneth Fearing’s The Big Clock.

Série noire adapts Jim Thompson’s A Hell of A Woman to the banlieues of Paris: in an astonishing performance, Patrick Dewaere (Themroc) attempts to save a young girl from prostitution, with murder the only solution.

In Choice of Arms, Yves Montand heads an all-star cast, including Catherine Denueve and Gerard Depardieu, as a former crook pulled out of retirement when a gang on the run turn to him for shelter after a prison break.

LIMITED EDITION BLU-RAY SPECIAL FEATURES

4K restorations from the original negatives by Studio Canal, presented on three discs

Uncompressed mono PCM audio for each film

Audio commentary by Mike White on Police Python 357 (2024)

Maxim Jakubowski on Police Python 357’s source novel and adaptation (2024)

Archival interview with Alain Corneau and François Périer about Police Python 357 from Belgian Television (1976)

Série noire set interviews with Alain Corneau, Patrick Dewaere and Miriam Boyer from Belgian Television (1981)

Série noire: The Darkness of the Soul - An archival documentary featuring cast and crew on the making of the film (2013, 53 mins)

Archival interview with Alain Corneau and Marie Trintignant about Série noire (2002, 30 mins)

A visual essay about Jim Thompson adaptations for the screen by Paul Martinovic (2024)

Introduction by documentary filmmaker Jérôme Wybon (2024)

Shooting Choice of Arms - interviews with the cast and crew including behind-the-scenes footage (1981)

Interviews with Deneuve, Montand and Depardieu from the set (1981)

Interview with Manuela Lazic on Yves Montand in the 1970s (2024)

Trailers

Optional English subtitles for each film

Reversible sleeve featuring designs based on original posters

Limited edition 80-page booklet featuring new writing by Andrew Male, Nick Pinkerton, Charlie Brigden, and newly translated archival writing

Limited edition of 2500 copies, presented in a rigid box with full-height Scanavo cases and removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and marking

UK/US

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Finch
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#2 Post by Finch » Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:28 am

Serie Noire is a wonderful film and it's about time it got a release outside of the US. I don't know the other two films and the press quotes are only for Serie Nore.

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domino harvey
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#3 Post by domino harvey » Wed Dec 04, 2024 8:39 am

Hated Python (pictured on the cover), enjoyed Serie noire, haven’t seen the third one yet. Wish this included his excellent Melville remake, which would have fit the theme perfectly— maybe if this set sells well we’ll get a second volume

StefanH
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#4 Post by StefanH » Wed Dec 04, 2024 9:29 am

Regarding Série noire, there is the old 2013 French BD edition of course. In the UK edition of the Radiance set, Série noire will have some short BBFC-related cuts, unfortunately.

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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#5 Post by domino harvey » Wed Dec 04, 2024 10:09 am

Are you sure of that, or assuming? Surprised it’s getting a US release since the Serie noire Blu is still in print here, as far as I know

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Grand Wazoo
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#6 Post by Grand Wazoo » Wed Dec 04, 2024 10:28 am

Fran confirmed minor cuts to pass the BBFC. The US edition will be uncut.

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domino harvey
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#7 Post by domino harvey » Wed Dec 04, 2024 10:34 am

Interesting, thanks. I assume it’s Trintignant’s nude scene? I don’t remember any animal cruelty

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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#8 Post by StefanH » Wed Dec 04, 2024 10:36 am

Yes, it is now confirmed for this film. There are some cuts due to nudity, Marie Trintignant was still a minor when the film was made.

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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#9 Post by ryannichols7 » Thu Dec 05, 2024 3:39 am

Fran got asked on the other forum why this isn't part of World Noir #3 (a baffling question honestly):
Because it's a US release as well and people in the US don't want a vol 3 of a series they can't buy in full!

We also have plenty more World Noir to come...

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domino harvey
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#10 Post by domino harvey » Thu Dec 05, 2024 7:11 pm

I am happy to report that Le choix des armes is by far the best of the lot. I greatly enjoyed Corneau's literal Melville remake of Le Deuxième Souffle, but part of what made that one work was how he took all of Melville's material and completely reconfigured it into something else entirely while still embodying an ethos of style above everything else-- Corneau was so effective that his remake was surprisingly much better than the original. Here, however, he has literally given us a lost Meville film, not in pastiche or homage but in form, function, and effect. Impossibly labyrinthine levels of criminals and cops, inscrutable loyalties and changes of heart, and the inexhaustible forward drive of the impossibly doomed, it's all here. One big difference, of course, is that there's no world in which Melville would ever let Depardieu go so untethered as he is here. But that's okay, this isn't actually a Melville film-- I just loved it as much as one!

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Arn777
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#11 Post by Arn777 » Thu Dec 05, 2024 7:53 pm

I'm interested to hear why you didn't like Police Python 357. I haven't seen it for years, but out of the three here, this is my favourite. As much as I like Patrick Dewaere I was a bit disappointed by Serie Noire. In any case I'm delighted Radiance is releasing these!

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domino harvey
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#12 Post by domino harvey » Thu Dec 05, 2024 8:30 pm

It runs a bit with a lot of other French policier/conspiracy thrillers I was watching at the time, but I remember finding it quite shrill and obnoxious, as I did his France, societe anonyme— it didn’t help that I don’t really like any of the adaptations of this source text. Perhaps I will revisit with this set and be able to offer more details or maybe even reevaluate it upwards.

Corneau is an interesting director who is all over the place for me, and my favorite film of his has virtually nothing in common with any of these genre pics (other than Depardieu). I’ve only seen about half of his oeuvre, so certainly an area for further study for me

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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#13 Post by therewillbeblus » Fri Dec 06, 2024 11:45 pm

Police Python 357 isn't very good - it's slow and overstays its welcome during the first hour, and then struggles to keep investment up in the back half during the 'action' portions. I don't think the source is very strong, but this could've been a lot more fun if whittled down to a lean 90. Comparatively, Choice of Arms has an entirely different strategy - a long, no-fat noir that's constantly shapeshifting with unexpected turns that still follow an internal logic, trusting the audience to stay current and buy in. The revolving plot points keep up with each other all the way down to its clean, perfect ending. It's been a few years since I watched Série noire, but I recall finding it an imperfect but intoxicating bit of lunacy - an externalization of its antihero I suppose

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TMDaines
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Re: 97-99 Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau

#14 Post by TMDaines » Wed Dec 11, 2024 10:09 am

A shame that the set will be cut in the UK, but it is a lot more understandable this time.

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