Fran Simeoni has been a
well-known name in the world of classic and cult film releasing for a long time
thanks to his years at Arrow Video, but in 2022 he set out on his own with a
new label called Radiance Films (https://www.radiancefilms.co.uk/).
Cinema Retro caught up with him to talk about his reasons for starting
Radiance and their future plans.
Cinema Retro - Can
you tell us why you started Radiance?
Fran – I worked
for Arrow for 12 years. That's where I really learned the business side, but I
got to the point where I wanted to do things that were more in line with my own
interests. It was also about change of pace and a change of scenery as much as
anything, really. What I wanted to do with Radiance was to have my cake and eat
it, essentially, so I left Arrow on a Friday and started working again on Monday.
I had a big list, because you're constantly looking for titles. There are
always things that I'd like to see that I had previously looked into. These
things are always kind of going round and round, so I had loads I could draw on.
Radiance came out of the gates really, really quick, a little bit faster than I
anticipated.
Cinema Retro - Considering
you've been going for less than a year, you've already got quite an big number
of releases either out or announced.
Fran - I
wasn't starting from scratch. I had a lot of things that I knew I could do and
was drawing on relationships that I've had for years and years, so it was it
was not difficult for me to get titles. The challenge for me is doing
everything that's involved in getting them out. It's all the restoration work,
the authoring, creating the extras and stuff. That's what is time consuming.
Cinema Retro –
Let's talk about the Japanese film Big Time Gambling Boss (1968): Could
you just talk me through the process of identifying the title, finding out
where the rights are, the restoration, all that kind of thing?
Fran - Before
I started at Arrow I would basically just find out about films by reading about
them. So that really is the basis for finding lots of things even in a
professional capacity. And I think what happens is it's very easy when you're
sort of indoctrinated into the industry, is to do things by just talking to
people who sell films and do it that way. So in a way, you're kind of working
from their agenda in that they have restored something, and they want to push
that. They're showing at a festival or they've got a screening. If they haven't
got an agenda for a film, and Big Time Gambling Boss was on nobody's
agenda, then it's really difficult to find a film like that. So that and many
of the films do really come from my agenda and that is my reading about them. Big
Time Gambling Boss goes back probably about ten years to when I first read
about it when I was working on the Arrow boxset Battles Against Honour and Humanity.
It came up because we reprinted an article about the Yakuza films and it's
mentioned in there and it went to the back of my mind. I never did anything
about it because it was really difficult to see. Eventually I did find a way to
see it and I knew it was owned by Toei so I just went there and asked, “Have
you got this film? Is it in HD when you restored it?” etc. And from there it's
easy.
Cinema Retro - And
then how do you persuade the consumer at the other end that this is a film that
they're going to want to buy?
Fran - Yeah,
that's the big challenge. I want to be as distinctive as possible because the
boutique label market is an incredibly knowledgeable crowd. We’re at a point
now where the market is so mature that you can take bigger risks. We've got all
the classics, so then we're always adding new great directors. I think if
people are already fans with one thing and then you explain it in terms that
they can have a leaping off point: “So this is a Yakuza film.” You've got
things to cling on to. I think if you have those access points, people are
going to go for it. The trick, of course, is to not overplay your hand. You
don't want to go out and say this is a masterpiece and then people watch it and
think “It’s okay!” I do have some Japanese films coming out which aren't
masterpieces, but they're a hell of a good time.
Cinema Retro - The
phrase ‘Big Time Gambling Boss’ could be on your business card.
Fran - Yeah,
it does feel like that sometimes.
Cinema Retro –
Another example is something like Walking the Edge (1985), where you've
partnered up with Fun City Editions. That's kind of a different approach to
doing the whole thing from scratch.
Fran - I
began to license Married to the Mob (1988) and Cutter’s Way (1981)
and I ended up speaking to Fun City because I knew they were doing them and I
said, “There's no point me doing everything you've done. What's the point in me
doing the same extras as you, with just a slightly different cover?” I like their
stuff and I think they're great films. I explained this to Fun City, and some
of the other labels and said, “Why don't we just partner? I can be your conduit
and you can do what you're doing in more than one territory.” It's been
well-received so far. It's still early days, but that's the idea. We're up to
five labels now. I mean, it just remains to be seen how it's going to go but
the signs are good.
Cinema Retro - One
of the things that you've announced that you've got coming up soon is the ‘Cosa
Nostra’ box set, the collection of three Damiano Damiani films. Was that one of
your projects from the beginning?
Fran - Yes,
that's one of mine. That kind of political filmmaking is really fascinating to
me. I love that era of Italian filmmaking.
Cinema Retro - So
what was it about those films that that made you want to create your first box
set?
Fran - I
had acquired a few Damiani films and these three, as I was working on them and
researching them, it just occurred to me that they have this thematic link of
the Mafia and I just thought that was so fascinating because Damiani went back
to this sort of theme over and over again. When you
have them side by side, they become more interesting. Damiani was somebody
who's never really been given his due. No one has looked at Damiani and said, “What
a stylish director.” He didn't do avant-garde, he didn't do arthouse, he was
sort of squarely in the middle, and I think that's what didn't allow anyone to come
around and say this guy should be celebrated. When you look at all his films,
particularly when you have them side by side, you do get a very strong sense of
him being an auteur and his visual sense becomes much more apparent the more
you look at it. His whole inner ethos behind his films, civic investigation
essentially, is really fascinating. The way in which he does some of those
things is as good as someone like Francesco Rosi or Elio Petri. You had Rosi at
the much more political end and then Petri becomes slightly more baroque, and
then Damiani came after that going more towards genre. And then after Damiani
you have all the poliziotteschi that everyone's familiar with. So that
kind of trajectory is fascinating in itself, I think.
Cinema Retro - And
of course, Franco Nero! It helps that you can have him on the box cover because
he's very marketable to cult film fans.
Fran - Yeah,
absolutely. He is a great asset, obviously. My worry always with everything
that I do, because of where my interests lie, is that I don't want to get stuck
in the cracks, because sometimes some of the films I focus on are too arthouse
for genre fans and too genre for arthouse fans, and these films are a bit like
that. They become increasingly genre as you progress through the set, and
Franco Nero is brilliant in it, particularly in The Case is Closed: Forget It
(1971) in which his performance is one of his best. We have a profile of him in
the book and he's had an amazing career.
Cinema Retro –
What have you got coming up for Radiance?
Fran - We've
got The Bride Wore Black (1968), the François Truffaut film, which is a
lot of fun.
Cinema Retro –
That's interesting as, like you said, it’s got that arthouse versus genre idea,
because when people think Truffaut, they think French New Wave, but then at the
same time, it's got the crime thing going on.
Fran - It’s
François Truffaut's Kill Bill (2003). It's a lot of fun as a film and
it's not a film he was very fond of. He basically made it because he needed to
do something commercial but if you look at the biggest hits of the New Wave,
they were very crime influenced or genre influenced. Just look at À bout de
souffle (1960), with its meditation on Bogart and crime films and so on. So
this for me is just an extension of that, essentially, but it's very much its
own thing. It's as close to Hollywood movies as you get from that period in
France. And it's a lot of fun! Jeanne Moreau is good in it, it's got a great
cast and inexplicably it’s never been out on Blu-ray in the U.K. I had a lot of
fun putting together the extras. And then we have Yakuza Graveyard
(1976), which is one of Kinji Fukasaku's best films, I think. This is an
interesting counterpoint to Big Time Gambling Boss, because that is a
much more traditional, more reserved Yakuza film and then Yakuza Graveyard
is the complete opposite! It's frenetic, it's completely bombastic, and its
violence and visuals are just a lot of fun. I do feel like I'm doing a lot of
crime films. I don't actually want to only do crime films! But I do have a
passion for crime films and this is a great one. It's basically about a corrupt
ex-cop and his dealings with the Yakuza and he falls in love with the Yakuza
wife, played by Meiko Kaji. It was really fascinating to dig into this film
because there is a theme going on with Japanese films of the time and their
treatment of Koreans and treatment of Koreans in the films themselves. It's
difficult to understand as an outsider but we were able to dig into that in the
booklet, which is really fascinating. I love the kind of educational aspect of
this work and it's there if people want it as an extra. I think some people
just watch the film and move on, but it is fascinating when you have this throughline
between all the films. I think the tight curation that we have really helps us.
I think if you're constantly going back to Radiance releases, you’d be watching
The Sunday Woman (1975) from us next month. You’d think “Oh, I really like
that actor, he's quite cool,” and then you'll get the ‘Cosa Nostra’ box set and
the same actor pops up in a completely different role. And then you sort of
start to get a sense of these character actors that you might not really know so
that's a lot of fun as well.
Cinema Retro - Boutique
label collectors and fans are probably the most educated of all the film fans
because so much is targeted at them. There are all these books and obviously
all the releases now have booklets and extras and commentary tracks, and people
can become so invested and know absolutely everything.
Fran - Fans
know more than you do and point things out that you've got wrong. I mean, the
fans always know more than me for sure, because it's me versus 3000 people away.
The fans are always going to win out and that does create pressure in the job. You
do have to be really thorough! The way I manage that is by always trying to
hire the absolute best people for the booklets and the commentary tracks. That
can be a challenge at times if it’s a film no one has ever seen before, but
it's a fun one.
Thank you to Fran Simeoni at
Radiance Films. You can find out about all their current and future releases at
https://www.radiancefilms.co.uk/