63 Tchao Pantin

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Finch
Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2008 5:09 pm
Location: Edinburgh, UK

63 Tchao Pantin

#1 Post by Finch » Wed Apr 03, 2024 5:43 am

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Bensoussan (Richard Anconina) is a small-time drug pusher in the 18th Arrondissement of Paris. Being trailed by suspicious patrol cops he takes refuge in a petrol station and strikes up a conversation with night manager Lambert (Coluche). As Bensoussan continues to drop in on Lambert they develop a friendship. But it isn't long before problems arise for Bensoussan and Lambert feels a responsibility to the the young tearaway. Slick and stunningly shot by Bruno Nuytten (Possession), this rain-soaked neo-noir was a multiple winner at the French César Academy Awards taking home acting prizes for both leads, the film anchored by their tender performances. A tale of friendship and revenge set within the fatalistic noir framework, Claude Berri's Tchao Pantin was a box office smash in France. Radiance Films is proud to present Tchao Pantin on Blu-ray for the first time outside of France from a glorious 4K restoration supervised by Nyutten.

LIMITED EDITION BLU-RAY SPECIAL FEATURES

4K restoration by Pathé approved by cinematographer Bruno Nuytten
Uncompressed mono PCM audio
Once Upon a Time… Tchao Pantin - A documentary on the film featuring interviews with writer-director Claude Berri, novelist Alain Page, stars Richard Anconina, Mahmoud Zemmouri, Agnés Soral, cinematographer Bruno Nyutten and others (2003, 55 mins)
More to be confirmed
Trailer
Newly improved English subtitle translation
Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Filippo Di Battista
Limited edition booklet featuring new writing by Manuela Lazic

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domino harvey
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Re: Tchao Pantin

#2 Post by domino harvey » Wed Apr 03, 2024 8:38 am

FYI this film is available in an English-subbed region-free Blu-ray from France as part of a five film Coluche box set (all with subs) for like $50

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tenia
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Re: Tchao Pantin

#3 Post by tenia » Wed Apr 03, 2024 8:45 am

Wondering if they'll color-correct this quite Eclair'd restoration though (and keep the "approved by Nuytten" blurb !).

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domino harvey
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Re: Tchao Pantin

#4 Post by domino harvey » Wed Apr 03, 2024 8:46 am

tenia wrote:
Wed Apr 03, 2024 8:45 am
Wondering if they'll color-correct this quite Eclair'd restoration though (and keep the "approved by Nuytten" blurb !).
A good point-- they should start advertising any of these regrettable transfers they color-correct, as it really can be a selling point!

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tenia
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Re: Tchao Pantin

#5 Post by tenia » Wed Apr 03, 2024 9:56 am

True enough ! But I suspect rightholders and restoration labs might not all be happy realising how many of the expertly graded and referent-ly approved restorations actually require such work. For instance, I forgot about it as I didn't particularly like the movie, but Big Guns also seems to have been color corrected. Elegant Beast also has a different grading (massively different at that) than the French BD (same restoration), and Working Class Goes to Heaven and Fill Er Up with Super also were corrected. And that's not taking B&W movies into account ! (Some restorations have dreadfully poor black levels, which Radiance corrected, like Witness in the City) It's starting to make quite a list.

If anything, it shows how many restorations are concerned and how these issues can be at least attenuated as what is now seemingly routine for a home video label (and that's quite a sad thing to realise as it definitely shouldn't be up to a home video label to have the grading right - or at least not obviously wrong).

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ryannichols7
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Re: Tchao Pantin

#6 Post by ryannichols7 » Wed Apr 03, 2024 10:43 am

do the two of you like this movie? it's totally new to me

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domino harvey
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Re: Tchao Pantin

#7 Post by domino harvey » Wed Apr 03, 2024 12:19 pm

Haven’t watched it yet, but I only just received the Coluche box set. It was already in my radar from the Cesar Awards project. Coluche is an interesting figure, I have to imagine one of the forthcoming extras will be focused on him. He was kind of a French Belushi who ran for President and actually started to garner enough votes that he was “encouraged” to drop out of the race. Despite his heft, he was also an avid motorcyclist (which led to his death at a young age— though there are conspiracies that he was assassinated!) and gave Miou-Miou her stage name

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tenia
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Re: Tchao Pantin

#8 Post by tenia » Wed Apr 03, 2024 12:54 pm

I used to like it quite a lot, but I've grown indifferent to it. I think it's not a poorly made movie, but I like less and less its script, that feels more artificial and superficial each time I watch it.
domino harvey wrote:
Wed Apr 03, 2024 12:19 pm
He was kind of a French Belushi who ran for President and actually started to garner enough votes that he was “encouraged” to drop out of the race. Despite his heft, he was also an avid motorcyclist (which led to his death at a young age— though there are conspiracies that he was assassinated!) and gave Miou-Miou her stage name
His public figure and his career are both filled enough to write books about it, and he left a huge mark in the French culture, not the least by starting Les restos du coeur, a charity based on the idea that nobody in a country such as France should be hungry or left outside in the cold, and it's a charity that still lives on (sadly, in a way) as of today and has become probably one of the most renown charity in France, at a level similar to the Red Cross.
He also was friends (and sometimes a complicated friend) with quite a lot of popular French comedians, in particular Patrick Dewaere (very complicated story), but also the Splendid.
And yeah, he was popular enough at some point to run for President in 81, supported by Bourdieu and Deleuze, but it's always been said he's withdrawn his candidature because of pressures against him (and there has been concrete proofs that the then-Central Directorate of General Intelligence got orders from the then-Prime Minister to find dirt against him).

I don't think all his jokes aged well (far from it), but he was a very popular working-class figure and what he did IRL tended to accredit it was sincere. Tchao Pantin is consensually considered as being his best role/movie, far away from his usual comedic style (close to what De Funes would do), and I still think it is, but I'm just not so fond of it anymore (and do tend, in the end, to prefer Coluche's comedies, particularly L'aile ou la cuisse - with De Funes - and Inspecteur la Bavure - with Depardieu -).
Last edited by tenia on Wed Apr 03, 2024 12:54 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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ryannichols7
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Re: Tchao Pantin

#9 Post by ryannichols7 » Wed Apr 03, 2024 1:02 pm

wow, if nothing else his story sounds as fascinating as the film might be! I find it interesting how a lot of the comedies in other cultures* don't do as well in the US/UK...much like Fran mentioned when putting out the Commedia all'Italiana box. they sound very interesting to me, but who knows if there will actually be a shot at seeing them over here. appreciate both of your thoughts on anything French that I haven't gotten to see yet

(*-curiously, while making my Kino sale purchase last night, I was digging into this forum's love for Has Anybody Seen My Gal?, so maybe it's not just limited to other cultures. we should all lighten up and laugh more!)

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