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Touch Blu-ray with Limited Edition J-Card MediaBook Slipcase (Cinématographe)

Touch Blu-ray with Limited Edition J-Card MediaBook Slipcase (Cinématographe)

Regular price $34.99 USD
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description

Former evangelist Bill Hill (Christopher Walken, King of New York) discovers Juvenal (Skeet Ulrich, Scream), a purported miracle worker who can heal people simply by touching them and bears the marks of stigmata on his body. Hill, no stranger to exploiting others, sees a potential fortune in Juvenal and primes him for show business but Hill’s plans go awry when the woman he entrusts to seduce Juvenal (Bridget Fonda, Jackie Brown) falls for him and a fundamentalist reverend (Tom Arnold, True Lies) threatens to put a stop to the whole enterprise.

Based on a novel by noted crime author Elmore Leonard (Get Shorty, Jackie Brown) and
adapted for the screen and directed by Paul Schrader (Hardcore, Affliction), TOUCH is a burst of post-Tarantino dark comedy, matching Leonard’s offbeat characters with Schrader’s unwavering examination of theology in America. Featuring an ensemble cast that also includes the likes of Gina Gershon (Bound), Lolita Davidovich (Raising Cain), Paul Mazursky (director of An Unmarried Woman), Janeane Garofalo (Reality Bites) and LL Cool J as himself, TOUCH is quintessential Paul Schrader and ripe for rediscovery. Cinématographe is proud to present this often overlooked entry in the career of one of America’s most prized filmmakers in its first ever blu-ray release, sourced from a new 2K scan of its original camera negative.

directed by: Paul Schrader
starring: Bridget Fonda, Christopher Walken, Skeet Ulrich, Gina Gershon, Tom Arnold, Paul Mazursky, LL Cool J, Lolita Davidovich
1997 / 96 min / 1.85:1 / English DTS-HD MA 5.1

Additional info:

  • Region A Blu-ray
  • New 2K restoration from the 35mm Interpositive with original 5.1 theatrical soundtrack
  • New video interview with writer/director Paul Schrader
  • New audio commentary with film historians Howard S. Berger and Steve Mitchell
  • New video essay by Daniel Kremer
  • Essays by film critics Chris Cabin and Bilge Ebiri and filmmaker/writer Cosmo Bjorkenheim
  • English SDH subtitles