
POLICE PYTHON 357
Color, 1976, 126 mins. 24 secs.
Directed by Alain Corenau
Starring Yves Montand, François Périer, Simone Signoret, Stefania Sandrelli, Mathieu Carrière
Radiance Films (Blu-ray) (US/UK RA/RB HD), Studiocanal (Blu-ray) (France RB HD), Universal (DVD) (France R2 PAL) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9)
SERIE NOIRE
Color, 1979, 115 mins. 53 secs. / 115 mins. 46 secs.
Directed by Alain Corneau
Starring Patrick Dewaere, Marie Trintignant, Myriam Boyer, Bernard Blier
Radiance Films (Blu-ray) (US/UK RA/RB HD), Film Movement (Blu-ray) (US RA HD), Studiocanal (Blu-ray & DVD) (France RB/R2 HD/PAL) / WS (1.66:1) (16:9)
CHOICE OF ARMS
Color, 1981, 135 mins. 46 secs.
Directed by Alain Corneau
Starring
Yves Montand, Gérard Depardieu, Catherine Deneuve, Michel Galabru, Gérard Lanvin, Jean-Claude Dauphin, Jean Rougerie, Christian Marquand
Radiance Films (Blu-ray) (US/UK RA/RB HD), Tanpool (Blu-ray & DVD) (Germany RB/R2 HD/PAL), Studiocanal (Blu-ray & DVD) (France RB/R2 HD/PAL) / WS (2.35:1) (16:9)
Like many of his peers who rose to popularity
in the 1970s, French director Alain Corneau showed an affinity for multiple genres and
proved he could deliver an art house hit with his most famous feature in the U.S., 1991's Tous les Matins du Monde. However, he first made his mark at home with a string of exceptional crime films made between 1976 and 1986, three of which were collected into a very worthy 2025 Blu-ray set from Radiance Films in the U.K. and U.S., Hardboiled: Three Pulp Thrillers by Alain Corneau. Whether you've seen these films before or know nothing about them until now, this is easily the best way to experience them at home.
First up is Corneau's initial teaming with the legendary Yves Montand in 1976's Police Python 357, one of three movie variations on the tense crime novel The Big Clock (also shot under its own name in 1948 and as No Way Out in 1987). Here the story gets moved into a police setting as Inspector Marc Ferrot (Montand) is smitten with the beautiful Sylvia (The Key's Sandrelli), unaware that she is also the mistress of his married superior, Commissioner Ganay (Le Cercle Rouge's Périer). When Sylvie ends up murdered one night, the rough and unsympathetic Ferrot finds a string of falsified evidence that could implicate him as the killer while he races against the clock to find out the real culprit. The gist of the story here is pretty much the same as usual, but the difference here lies in the thick '70s Euro-crime atmosphere and a final third that goes in some insane directions best left unspoiled here. You also get an interesting addition here with Simone Signoret added to the story as Ganay's bedridden and
possibly complicit wife, and Georges Delerue contributes a sparse but interesting score that marks a bit of a departure for him.
While the Italian crime films of the '70s found a great deal of distribution in English-speaking areas both theatrically
and on home video, the French policiers like this had a tougher time despite being quite commercial and usually packed with stars. Actors like Montand and Jean-Paul Belmondo were hugely popular at home and in countries like Japan, but for whatever reason their films generally proved to be a tougher sell in areas where dubbed was considered the norm for something outside the art house realm. That proved to be the case with this film which had to be imported on French VHS or DVD for years by curious fans since you couldn't even stumble across these subtitled on TV. The Radiance set will likely be the first opportunity most viewers have to watch this subtitled outside the gray market, and it's taken from a solid master provided by Studiocanal previously seen on French Blu-ray (not English friendly) as part of the label's "Make My Day" boutique line. The usual French LPCM mono track sounds fine here, and the optional English subtitles are excellent. The Projection Booth's Mike White delivers a thorough new audio commentary covering Corneau's early career, the differences from the source novel, the backgrounds of the actors, and the genre crossovers happening around the time. Just be forgiving of his basic French pronunciation which is... unique, and extra points for Creepshow shout out. A new video interview with Maxim Jakubowski (15m11s) focuses on Coreanu's connections to the Série noire French crime publisher, Jim Thompson's career at the time dealing with French filmmakers, and this film in particular as part of a noir literary resurgence during the decade. Finally you get an archival 1976 interview for Belgian TV with Corneau and Périer (5m31s) chatting about the making of the film, the seemingly tangential nature of the title, the intimidating but rewarding process of working with
Signoret, and the
trepidation about casting Montand in this role.
On disc two we hop over the excellent Corneau-Montand reunion Le Menace from 1976 (which is worth hunting down) and get to 1979's Série Noire, a marvelous adaptation on Jim Thompson's novel A Hell of a Woman and arguably the most iconic role for actor Patrick Dewaere. The fact that both he and fellow lead Marie Trintignant (in her breakthrough role) would later die tragically gives the film even more of a haunted aspect than it already has, and the grim working class setting is impeccably rendered here with the forgotten edges of Paris making a fine counterpart to American noir's Midwestern hellscapes. Dewaere is a jittery, live wire wonder here as Franck Poupart, a salesman who skims money off the side and suffers in a broken marriage to Jeanne (Boyer). One day while on collecting duties he encounters an older woman (Herviale) who offers her young niece, Mona (Trintignant), as payment, which he refuses. Later he and Mona reunite when she surprisingly bails him out after a legal scrap, which leads them to planning a robbery scheme and a multiple body count.
Operating as his own sort of split personality Greek chorus, Dewaere is an inspired choice for a Thompson protagonist and is never less than magnetic here, with the inevitable horrors of the final act also conveying the tone of reading a pulp novel down to the last detail. Largely thanks to the lead's international acclaim with Going Places,
Serie Noire earned a heftier international release than usual at the time including a U.S. run but became hard to see subtitled for decades after that. Eventually a much-touted restoration debuted in France in 2019 and was given a limited U.S. theatrical run from Rialto Pictures, though the presentation left a lot to be desired with the color timing sporting that icky yellow tinge all too common among French-based "restorations" in recent years. That was also the case with the French Blu-ray
release as well as the first U.S. Blu-ray from Film Movement, which came with a new essay by Nick Pinkerton and "The Darkness of the Soul" (52m33s), an archival documentary from 2013 featuring producer Maurice Bernat, director of photography Pierre William-Glenn, actress Miriam Boyer, and Nadine Trintignant. In keeping with its welcome past track recording of fixing flawed masters, Radiance presents its disc with some significant adjustments to the color grading to restore the intended cooler appearance of the film with those hideous lemon-lime skies finally gone. The LPCM 2.0 French mono track sounds excellent, with optional English subtitles provided. The "Darkness of the Soul" doc is ported over here and you also get a 2002 interview combining separate comments from Corneau and (briefly) Trintignant (2002, 28m52s) including Patrick's reaction to the film compared to the production process, perspectives on Thompson's role in noir fiction, the improvisatory elements of the film, and their thoughts looking back on what they feel is a "sweet" film. The visual essay "A Hollyhock in a Cornfield" (29m41s) about Jim Thompson adaptations for the screen by Paul Martinovic covers the challenges of adapting the writer's voice to film, Coup de Torchon, The Getaway, The Grifters,
After Dark, My Sweet, the multiple disparate versions of The Killer Inside Me, and the necessity of casting the right actor here for the unorthodox nature of the protagonist in this film.
A trailer is also included.
Finally we get to the last of the Corneau-Montand films, 1981's Choice of Arms (Le choix des armes), featuring the heaviest-hitting cast of the batch. Here Montand plays Noël, a retired powerful gangster who now raises horses on his farm with wife Nicole (Deneuve). One night a trio of crooks led by rock-singing Mickey (Depardieu) have just broken out of prison, killed a cop, and swiped a female motorist's car. As the convicts' numbers dwindle, Mickey makes his way through a variety of characters including Noël and Nicole, with cops Bonnardot (Galabru) and Sarlat (Lanvin) turning out to be a thorn in the side of everyone involved. An increasingly panicked Mickey believes Noël is a threat to his freedom, setting off a double manhunt across the countryside.
Superficially this seems like a typical crime film pitting a young criminal against a seasoned pro who wants to stay out of the game, and that's what you get to an extent. However, the actors inject it with more complexity as Depardieu's sweaty, hair-trigger performance contrasts nicely with Montand's grounded but unsparing persona. Deneuve has far less to do here but is always a welcome presence, and the fairly frequent gun-play scenes are handled well especially during the propulsive opening half hour.
At an indulgent 135 minutes, this could have easily lost half an hour and benefiting from tighter pacing -- but when you're in this kind of company, you can't complain too much. For some reason despite its pedigree, this has been treated as less of a prestige film on home video in France than you'd expect; it was streamed in HD for a few years on various European Netflix options (with English subs) but wasn't issued on Blu-ray until a 2024 Studiocanal Blu-ray appeared as part of the label's no-frills '80s line. The Radiance disc treats it with a lot more respect; the same scan is ported over here and looks fine, capturing the overcast and drab aesthetic as well as the the wide scope framing (with this
being the only one shot in Panavision). This was also the director's first film presented in Dolby Stereo, and it's an aggressive mix with lots of dramatic channel separate throughout that also makes for a nice showcase for Philippe Sarde's score. An intro by documentarian Jérôme Wybon (3m14s) contextualizes the film among a shift in French thrillers around this time as multiple generations were wrapping up their collaborations together, while a vintage making-of for French TV (21m48s) mixes EPK-style interviews with the cast and crew with behind-the-scenes footage. More substantive is a separate interview session with Deneuve, Montand and Depardieu together on the set (18m12s), touching on some issues of the day like feminism and including a funny bit with Deneuve talking about swearing. Finally you get the trailer and a new interview with Manuela Lazic (23m57s) about Yves Montand in the '70s including his cultural importance as a working class symbol, his background as both an actor and singer, and the significance he held for the population that lingers today. The set also comes with a limited edition 80-page insert booklet with essays by Andrew Male, Nick Pinkerton, and Charlie Brigden, plus newly translated appraisals of Corneau's work.
SERIE NOIRE: Radiance (Blu-ray)


SERIE NOIRE: Film Movement (Blu-ray)


Reviewed on May 10, 2025.