As an Amazon associate we earn from qualifying purchases. Thanks for your support!                               
×

Best Blu-ray Movie Deals


Best Blu-ray Movie Deals, See All the Deals »
Top deals | New deals  
 All countries United States United Kingdom Canada Germany France Spain Italy Australia Netherlands Japan Mexico
The Conjuring 4K (Blu-ray)
€44.99
 
Conclave (Blu-ray)
€15.00
 
Hôtel du Nord (Blu-ray)
€15.00
1 day ago
Creepshow - L'Intégrale des saisons 1 à 4 (Blu-ray)
€42.22
 
Thunderbolts* 4K (Blu-ray)
€24.99
 
Macross Zero (Blu-ray)
€59.16
 
Gladiator II 4K (Blu-ray)
€14.99
 
Solo Leveling - Saison 1 (Blu-ray)
€39.83
13 hrs ago
Barbie 4K (Blu-ray)
€9.99
 
Kraven the Hunter 4K (Blu-ray)
€14.99
 
Revenge (Blu-ray)
€15.00
 
Black Clover - V - Saison 3 - Première Partie (Blu-ray)
€39.99
 
What's your next favorite movie?
Join our movie community to find out


Image from: Life of Pi (2012)

Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > Blu-ray Movies - International > France
Register FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search


 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
Old 08-31-2008, 05:56 AM   #1
pro-bassoonist pro-bassoonist is offline
Blu-ray reviewer
 
pro-bassoonist's Avatar
 
Jul 2007
X
47
-
-
-
31
23
France Mr 73



Gaumont are set to release Olivier Marshall's MR73 on September 23 in France/Monaco. Preliminary info indicates an English friendly presentation, a replica of the DVD.

Official site and trailer:
http://www.mr73-lefilm.com/

Variety:

Quote:
A cop drama-cum-serial-killer procedural that's as noir to the soul as its stygian lensing, Olivier Marchal's "MR 73" powerfully ties the bow on a triptych of dark crimers following the writer-director's debut, "Gangsters," and the award-winning "36 Quai des Orfevres." Headed by a socko performance from an encoring Daniel Auteuil, this time as a Marseilles inspector who's already halfway to hell, the film opened well in Gaul on March 12 and looks to have strong upscale legs offshore in the hands of the right distribs.

Pic has a similar structure to that of "Orfevres," with almost parallel character arcs slowly converging, though it's much more aggressive in look, with a high-contrast color palette of deep blacks, cold whites and not a lot of visual comfort in between. Tone is of the same heightened realism, with moments of pure theatricality, amplified by Denis Rouden's widescreen lensing and extreme color processing.

Thematically, the film is a neat fit with "Orfevres," with cops feuding as much among themselves as with crooks, and two central characters compromising themselves as they look for closure on past emotional traumas or mistakes. In the space of only three movies, Marchal confirms himself as a 21st-century heir to the late Jean-Pierre Melville.

Bedraggled, unshaven and with Mephistophelian orange-tinted glasses, veteran cop Louis Schneider (Auteuil, almost unrecognizable) is first seen drunkenly arguing with a bus driver and pulling a gun on the bus' occupants -- only to get arrested and carpeted by his superiors. A brilliant cop, he's been going to pieces ever since his wife and daughter were killed in a car accident.

A parallel plotline follows Charles Subra (Philippe Nahon), a psycho rapist and murderer who's spent more than half his life in prison and is now up for parole. Though he was sentenced to life, Subra now claims remorse for his past crimes and a desire to repent.

Justine (Olivia Bonamy), still traumatized from watching Subra slaughter her mom and dad 25 years earlier, is horrified he may be let go. In an act of pure confrontation, she writes to Subra in prison, calling him a "monster."

Meanwhile, Schneider, faced with an equally horrific series of serial rape/murders, is having difficulty holding his career together. Several plot triggers push the story into a different dimension as he and Justine finally meet, Subra reveals (to the audience only) he's still an unreconstructed madman, and Schneider bungles the arrest of a suspect (Swan Demarsan) in a maverick operation that goes fatally awry.

Pic, whose title refers to a make of French police handgun (Manurhin 73) used in the '70s and '80s prior to automatics, was inspired by a real-life 1981 crime when Marchal, as a 22-year-old rookie cop, witnessed the results of a family killing that made him decide to quit the force. Script's rich stew of casual police corruption, political finagling by superiors and quotidian brutalization on the job has a deeply personal feel, to an extent that the pic lacks the cool, clockwork inevitability that made "Orfevres" so memorable.

Film also lacks a comparably strong co-lead to compare with Gerard Depardieu, who faced off dramatically with Auteuil in the previous pic. Bonamy is OK as Justine but, like Melville, Marchal writes far better for men (or tough broads like Schneider's colleague Marie, played by Catherine Marchal) than he does for women.

Unlike "Orfevres," "MR 73" is very much a one-man show -- and Auteuil, growling his way through the role of Schneider, as he looks for a "second breath," is remarkable, with an attention to physical detail that's part and parcel of the whole movie's visual design. In retrospect, his character and the plotting don't make a heap of sense, but as pure cinema, "MR 73" is a potent roller-coaster ride through hell.

Subsidiary perfs are strong, with Nahon utterly believable as scumbag Subra; ditto thesps in other cop roles. Bruno Coulais' glacial score and Ambre Sansonetti's production design (the medieval prison, the tenebrous police HQ) are of a piece with the whole.
More than one option

Camera (color, widescreen), Denis Rouden; editor, Raphaele Urtin; music, Bruno Coulais; art director, Ambre Sansonetti; costume designer, Marie-Laure Lasson; sound (Dolby Digital), Pierre Mertens, Frederic Attal, Hubert Persat; visual effects supervisor, Stephane Bidault; stunt coordinator, Gregory Loffredo; assistant director, Ivan Fegyveres, Roxane Andreani Afar; casting, Catherine Chevron. Reviewed at Gaumont Champs Elysees Marignan 3, Paris, March 12, 2008. Running time: 123 MIN.
Ciao,
Pro-B
  Reply With Quote
 
Go Back   Blu-ray Forum > Movies > Blu-ray Movies - International > France



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 09:56 AM.