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La Femme Nikita
Movie:
4K Video:
Video:
Audio:
Extras:
Final Score:
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Movie:

4K Video:

Video:

Audio:

Extras:

Final Score:

AV NIRVANA is member and reader-supported. When you purchase an item using our links, we might earn an affiliate commission.
Sony has decided to release a 9 film set featuring 9 of Luc Besson's best films, including several previously release films, as well as 6 films that are brand new to 4K, or brand new to Blu-ray at all, housed in a really classiy fold over case and with a host of new additions to the legacy films. And to start off the batch we go back to the hit French film that started the "Nikita" remake craze of the 90s and early 2000s.
While Luc Besson may best be known in North America for his sci-fi blockbuster The Fifth Element or Leon: The Professional, one my favorite entries in his film repertoire has to be 1990’s La Femme Nikita, a stylized female led action film (before Jennifer Lawrence became the first female action lead ever) that spawned a 1993 Hollywood remake known as Point of No Return and a TV series in 1997, only to be reimagined as a NEW TV show starring Maggie Q. in the early 2000s. It was sharp, brutal, and actually had a more raw and emotional feeling than the Hollywood remake, and outside of a 110 lb girl weilding a .50 cal Desert Eagle one handed, a fairly believable take on the female action star.
Our film opens up with her protagonist Nikia (Anne Parillaud) and her junkie friends robbing a small shop in France in order to get their next fix. Unfortunately for them, the proprietor calls the cops on them, resulting with a gun battle between the strung out junkies and the officers, leaving only Nikita alive to stand trial for the mayhem. After being sent to prison where she is publicly “executed, Nikita wakes up to find out that her death was staged by the French Government, who sends mysterious agent “Bob” (Tcheky Karyo) to recruit Nikita (with the threat that if she doesn’t become a government asset, she WOULD be executed for real) into becoming a covert operative for them.
As such, I would describe La Femme Nikita to be a highly introspective take on the action genre. Besson mixes in high octane shootouts (and the inclusion of fan favorite Jean Reno as the psychotic cleaner near the end is amazing) with a gritty and very personal look at Nikita’s tenuous grasp on humanity. Comparing it directly against 1993’s Point of No Return (which is weirdly nearly a word for word remake of La Femme Nikita at times) shows a start difference in points of view on Nikta, as well as the differences between Hollywood productions and Besson’s native French production. Nikita is more gritty and visceral, with a more raw take on Nikita herself. Bridgette Fonda does a great job in Hollywood sort of way, but things are way too polished and way too “Hollywood Blockbuster” to really capture the brutality and tortured character of Nikita herself the way Besson did.
Rating:
Rated R by the MPAA
4K Video:
Video: 
Audio:

Extras:

• Nikita Tour
• Interviews
-- Actor Anne Parillaud
-- Actor Tcheky Karyo
-- Jean-Hugues Anglade
-- First Assistant Director Christophe Vassort
-- Gaumont Technical Director Andre Labbouz
• Theatrical Trailer
Final Score:
La Femme Nikita is an absolutely amazing classic 1990s action movie, and one of the best female characters that I’ve seen in action as well. Anne Parillaud knocked it out of the park portraying the multiple facets of the young killer’s personality, as well as her own personal growth and absolution near the end. Sony’s 4K UHD looks absolutely stunning, with a brand new 4K remaster that really perfects the gritty looking action flick as much as it can. This is near exact clone of the standalone steelbook 4K disc that I reviewed last year, but with some minor upgrades. Mostly by actually adding extras to the disc this go around AND including a Blu-ray disc as well. Nothing major, but it's nice to see that the disc is not a direct clone just slapped in this set.
(Being that each film is only included in the massive 9 film collection, my "buy it on Amazon" links will all lead back to the box set for purchase)
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Anne Parillaud, Marc Duret, Patrick Fontana, Tcheky Karyo
Directed by: Luc Besson
Written by: Luc Besson
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 HEVC
Audio: French: DTS-HD MA 5.1, English DTS-HD MA 5.1, French DTS-HD MA 2.0
Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish, English
Studio: Sony Pictures
Rated: R
Runtime: 117 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: November 11th, 2025
Recommendation: Great Watch
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