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District 13 - BLU-RAY Version (2006) Certificate 15

District 13 - BLU-RAY Version
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Rated 3.5 stars
Average rating
(68%)
 
Starring: Cyril Raffaelli | Tony D'Amario | Dany Verissimo | Bibi Naceri | David Belle
Director: Pierre Morel
Studio: MOMENTUM PICTURES
Run time: 81 mins
Collections: Blu-ray
Genres: Action/Adventure | World Cinema
Languages: French
Released: September 15, 2008
Also available on: District 13 - BLU-RAY Version is also available on DVD

Both of the leads in the French action flick DISTRICT 13 practice parkour, a kind of urban gymnastics that looks a little like skateboarding without the skateboard, and the pleasure of this short frenetic film is watching the two lithe heroes leap through windows, run up walls, and jump off buildings. Like Jackie Chan, Cyril Raffaelli, and David Belle, both stuntmen-turned-leading-men perform their own acrobatic martial arts sans special effects or invisible wires, and the lo-fi fight sequences pack a gritty punch that is often missing in slick Hollywood fare. The plot involves a futuristic France where the worst ghettos have been walled off from the rest of society, their schools shut down, and the police force evacuated. The people in power simply want to ignore the plight of the disenfranchised, but this becomes difficult to do when the most notorious gang, led by the wild-eyed Taha (Bibi Naceri), gets its hands on a nuclear warhead and proceeds to demand a 20-million-Euro ransom, with the city of Paris as its hostage. Enter Damien (Raffaelli), a one-man police strike force, who has 24 hours to disarm the missile. To help him navigate the war zone of District 13, he springs a vigilante antihero, Leito (Belle), from jail. Leito has personal reasons for taking down the crime lord: Taha has turned Leito's adolescent sister into his junkie pet. As the ultra-athletic duo go up against Taha's gangster army, they repeatedly (and conveniently) lose their guns, and are forced to improvise, thrashing goons with steering wheels, cinder blocks, and their foreheads. Lovers of action flicks could ignore the English subtitles completely and still relish the hyperkinetic beauty of the whip-quick combat.

Highest rated reviews

Rated 3 stars
Parkour

ChilliOne from , 30th April, 2009

Parkour is defined as the art of movement with the aim of getting from one place to another in the smoothest, most efficient ways and in Banlieue 13 we have a film based around this activity which demonstrates the grace and agility of its two leading men, David Belle and Cyril Raffaelli to great effect. Based in Paris of the near future where social discipline has been eroded to the point where the government has erected walled areas to contain the residents. Leïto (played by Belle) is a street-smart and good character in a bad world and comes up against the gangsters when he destroys a consignment of drugs which results in the mob kidnapping his little sister, the lovely Dany Verissimo and his incarceration by a corrupt police state. Some months later he is freed on condition that he joins forces with Capt. Tomaso (Raffaelli) to find a stolen neutron bomb that has been hidden in his home turf. What follows in high-octane action and beautifully choreographed movie that contains a lively plot that won't stretch the imagination too much but which is nevertheless fun and exciting. Raffaelli in particular did a lot of work on the Transporter films of Jason Statham so if you enjoyed them this could be right up your street.

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Rated 5 stars
Best action/marshal arts film ever

zed23 from , 10th February, 2009

If you are into action/marshal art films this is a must see, if you are also a fan of Luc Besson this will be the best film you will ever see.

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Rated 4 stars
good

A Customer from Bridgnorth, 14th December, 2008

good film still watchable even with english sub titles - action packed

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Rated 3 stars
Okay but not much parkour!

A Customer from Northampton, 25th November, 2008

As another reviewer has mentioned, most of the so-called parkour in this film isn't really what you'd expect. There's a moderately good bit at the beginning, but it's mostly used to add a slight twist to otherwise fairly standard martial arts style combat. It's not a bad film, but don't expect lots of mind-blowing free running!

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