Le Cercle Rouge (1970)
Rated: Not Rated
Runtime: 2 hrs 20 mins
Theatrical Release: Jan 10, 2003 Limited
Synopsis: Jean-Pierre Melville's hugely influential film remains a cornerstone of the crime genre. Recently released from prison, thief Corey (Alain Delon) finds himself caught up in a dangerous triangle with a mysterious woman (Gian Maria Volonte) and an ex-cop with some issues of his own (Yves... Jean-Pierre Melville's hugely influential film remains a cornerstone of the crime genre. Recently released from prison, thief Corey (Alain Delon) finds himself caught up in a dangerous triangle with a mysterious woman (Gian Maria Volonte) and an ex-cop with some issues of his own (Yves Montand). Melville's film is the epitome of cool, with moody cinematography and stellar set design. Featuring another standout performance from Delon, LE CERCLE ROUGE is a bona fide crime classic. [More]
Genre: Foreign Films
Starring: Alain Delon, Gian Maria Volonte, Yves Montand
DVD Info
Release:
Oct 28, 2003
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- 2-Disc Set
- Keep Case
- Single Side - Dual Layer
Additional Release Material:
- Featurettes - 1. Excerpts From 1970 Documentary "Cineastes de Notres Temps: Jean-Pierre Melville"
- 2. 30 Minutes of Rare On-Set Footage
- 3. Interview With Expert Rui Nogueria
- 4. Interview With Assistant Director Bernard Stora
- 5. French Television Interview Footage With Melville and Delon
- Original Theatrical Trailer
- 2002 Theatrical Re-Release Trailer
Text/Image Galleries:
- Poster Gallery
- Behind-the-Scenes Photos
- Publicity Photos
- Essay by Critic Michael Sragow
- Essay by Critic Chris Fujiwara
- Introduction by Director John Woo
- Excerpts From Rui Nogueria's Book "Melville on Melville"
Buy It On DVD
Reviews
Jean-Pierre Melville is one of the most remarkable figures in world cinema, though he remains little known.
You have to admire Jean-Pierre Melville's ambition to make a sophisticated "b-movie" that is moody, intelligent and consistently engaging.
A classic cornerstone of the heist genre from a master of the nouvelle vague.
Melville's special achievement was to relocate the American gangster film in France, and to incorporate his own steely poetic and philosophical obsessions.
Top-notch film noir with a bleak existential edge, executed with as much clinical precision as the crime it portrays.
It's a languorous and uncompromising work that will drive some to distraction, but also a movie of dark, still beauty that will have others weeping tears of pure, noir joy.
Apesar de jamais permitir que seus personagens falem muita coisa, Melville leva o espectador a conhecê-los através de suas ações, interações e olhares.
An exercise in ultimate-cool where men follow a code of honor to wherever it might lead them.
Melville remained, in all his work and particularly his policiers, a classicist of calamity, a master of transforming the chaos of criminality into a form as refined as a sonnet or a minuet.
A fitting capstone to the French director who melded icy hipster cool with a Parisian underground of cops, robbers, and the unbreakable, unknowable bond between the two.
One well-choreographed, beautifully shot and definitely cool cops-and-robbers film.
I can't say that Cercle Rouge is an overlooked masterpiece, but it's an amazing antidote to the current style of filmmaking in which silence and causal relationships are routinely disregarded.
News
posted by Joshua Tyler April 15, 2008
According to at least one news site, Orlando Bloom, Chow Yun Fat, and Liam Neeson are starring in a remake of the 1970...


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