It’s the perfect description of the awkward yet touching relationship between a simple 40-something assassin and a wise-beyond-her-years pre-teen girl, and it’s at the heart of our next pick in our Luc Besson series, his first foray into English-language cinema, 1994’s Léon: the Professional, or more simply just Léon. Join us — Pete Wright and Andy Nelson — as we talk about this fascinating film that we both quite enjoy, a film that is possibly Besson’s best.
We discuss the fascinating hitman story and what Besson brings to the table, including his Besson-isms that aren’t as prevalent as they were in Nikita but still show their face. We deliberate on the difficult waters the filmmakers were treading when telling this love-story-buried-within-a-crime-story between Natalie Portman’s Mathilda (in her first movie role) and a much older hitman (the always awesome Jean Reno). We talk about the amazing talent — Reno, the amazing turn of 12-year-old Portman, and the ridiculously over the top and meme-inspiring performance of Gary Oldman as a corrupt and evil DEA agent. We chat about the powerful cinematographic moments that Besson and his DP Thierry Arbogast used to capture a few of the most powerful scenes in the film. And we again wonder why Besson feels it necessary to continue employing a composer as bad as Eric Serra. It’s a film that Pete has always loved and Andy only just recently realized he likes it a lot more than he thought, and we have a great time talking about it. Listen in!
Film Sundries
- Original Script
- Original theatrical trailer
- Original poster artwork
- Gene Kelly in It’s Always Fair Weather (the scene Leon is watching in the theater)
- Flickchart
Assorted Notes & Links
- SNL Digital Shorts — Natalie Portman Raps
- Now You See Me — trailer
- Beautiful Creatures — trailer
- The Heat — trailer
- Identity Thief — trailer
- Warm Bodies — trailer
- $ellebrity — trailer