See How They Fall (1994)
Facts
See How They Fall
DVD Price: $24.98 $22.49You save 10%!
As of Nov 23 14:33 EST (details)
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| Cast | Philippe du Janerand, Mathieu Kassovitz, Francois Toumarkine, Jean-Louis Trintignant, Yves Verhoeven, Bulle Ogier, Christine Pascal, Jean Louis Trintignant and Jean Yanne |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 1993 |
| DVD Release | January 8, 2008 |
| Running Time | 90 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 873820000570 |
| Buy this item | $22.49 at Amazon.com As of Nov 23 14:33 EST (details) 1 DVD, Koch International, Usually ships in 24 hours, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: French (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Or 31 new from $10.99, 8 used from $10.99 |
About See How They Fall
A sales rep drops everything to stalk the murderers of his only friend. A mismatched pair of hired guns stumble blindly into the wild justice of revenge.
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User Reviews
Average user review: 
(2 reviews)
|  | stakeout for the sake of excitement |  |
the finer points of thug life, including shakedowns and professional hits,, great French crime thriller !!
July 2, 2008 |  | Not so easy to see them fall on this shoddy DVD |  |
Jacques Audiard's directorial debut See How They Fall aka Regarde les Hommes Tomber is our old friend, the film with two different stories that gradually converge and turn out to be the same story after all, simply told from different sides. It's a shaggy dog story, with Matthieu Kassovitz's simpleton following unlucky-in-cards drifter Jean Louis Trintignant with mutt-like devotion that even stretches to killing for him when he's asked to repay his gambling debts in kind. Meanwhile, in a slightly different timeframe, Jean Yanne's over-the-hill travelling salesman becomes increasingly obsessed with finding the hitman who put his cop friend into a brain-dead coma, his life, income and relationships gradually stripped away as he gets closer to his prey. Yet while it may offer the perfect setup for a modern-day neo noir, the film is often more surprisingly playful, more interested in quirks of character and a slightly skewed sense of humor (aptly served by the occasional ironic captions and Alexandre Desplat's half-jaunty, half-discordant score) than the traditional thriller set pieces and plot mechanics. Unfortunately the film is ill-served by one of the worst Region 1 DVDs released in recent years: the picture quality on Synkronized's disc is so poor at times you keep on expecting to see the audience's heads in front of the picture like a pirate disc. No extras. No surprise.
May 12, 2008More reviews at Amazon.com ...