Canadian International Pictures will release on Blu-ray Michel Brault's Orders (1974). The release is scheduled to arrive on the market on January 28.
Description: Following the shocking kidnapping of two prominent political figures in October 1970, Canada's federal government invokes the War Measures Act, an extreme law that strips citizens of their most fundamental human rights. Over the course of several weeks, 450 unsuspecting Québécois are abruptly ripped from their families and imprisoned without formal charges or explanations. Told through the eyes of five prisoners subjected to abuse and humiliation that borders on torture, ORDERS is an unsettling and unforgettable immersion in one of the most dystopian chapters in Canadian history.
The sophomore narrative feature from master cinematographer and filmmaker Michel Brault (a formative influence on director Denis Villeneuve), this unflinching prison drama explores the most egregious injustices perpetrated during the historic October Crisis. Drawn from extensive testimonials and told in the cinéma direct language Brault helped pioneer, ORDERS is a masterpiece of Québécois cinema that delivers a vision no less infuriating and impactful half a century after it won Best Director at the Cannes Film Festival.
Special Features and Technical Specs:
NEW RESTORATION FROM THE ORIGINAL NEGATIVE by Éléphant - mémoire du cinéma québécois with sections from the 35mm internegative and interpositive
New audio commentary featuring filmmaker/professor Frédérick Pelletier and author/professor Gabrielle Tremblay
Images of Immediacy (2024, 25 min.) – New interview with author/professor André Loiselle
Love at First Sight (2024, 17 min.) – New interview with sound recordist Serge Beauchemin
A Peaceful Nation: The Road to October 1970 (2024, 18 min.) – New interview with film historian/professor Sylvain Garel
Filming the FLQ (2024, 17 min.) – Garel on felquism in cinema
In the Shadow of Kafka (2024, 18 min.) – New interview with author/professor Angelos Koutsourakis
The October Crisis: 50 Years On-Screen (2020, 13 min.) – Interviews with filmmaker Mathieu Denis, actress Louise Forestier, actor Claude Gauthier, and filmmaker Félix Rose