When a notorious, highly sophisticated counterfeiter murders his partner, Secret Service agent Richard Chance (William Petersen) launches a furious vendetta to capture the man responsible. But master counterfeiter Rick Masters (Willem Dafoe) is always just one step ahead of Chance in William Friedkin's thrilling, suspenseful crime drama. With violent shoot-outs and a turbulent chase scene reminiscent of Friedkin's own THE FRENCH CONNECTION, TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. broke with tradition by making the ostensible hero as morally reprehensible as the villain he pursues. Clashing with bureaucratic obstacles, Chance is forced to break the rules in order to procure cash for a sting operation, but the risks he takes snowball into an avalanche of violence and moral repercussions, leading to a morally ambiguous cul-de-sac from which there may be no return.
Secret Service agent Richard Chance will do anything--whether legal or not--to nail the creep who murdered his partner. Then he gets a lead on the killer...but the wily criminal is smooth enough to keep eluding capture.
Theatrical Release: November 1, 1985
Filmed in Los Angeles and San Pedro.
Excerpt: "Why are you running?"--John Vukovich (John Pankow)
"Because you're chasing me!"--Criminal
Blu-ray Disc Features:
2-Disc Set
Region [unknown]
NTSC
Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
Dolby Surround - Spanish, French
DTS HD Master Audio 5.1 , Dolby Surround 4.0 - French, English
Subtitles - French, Spanish
Additional Release Material:
Behind the Scenes: "Counterfeit World: The Making of TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A."
Trailers: Original Theatrical Trailer
Audio Commentary: William Friedkin - Director
Alternate Scenes:
1. Deleted Scenes
2. Alternate Ending
Text/Photo Galleries:
Stills/Photos
Disc 1: TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. Blu-ray
Disc 2: TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. DVD
Distributor Notes: William L. Petersen (Manhunter, CSI ) and Willem Dafoe (Spider-Man) face off in a deadly game of cat and mouse in this riveting (The New York Times) action-thriller from the OscarĀ®-winning director of The French Connection. Full of flash, style and grit (Boxoffice), this raw tale of corruption and revenge features one of the most harrowing car chases ever caught on film and a shockingly explosive ending. Federal Agent Richard Chance (Petersen) has a score to settle, and he's through playing by the rules. Whether that means blackmailing a beautiful parolee, disobeying direct orders or hurtling the wrong way down a crowded freeway, he vows to take down a murderous counterfeiter (Dafoe) by any means necessary. But as the stakes grow higher, will Chance's obsession with vengeance ultimately destroy him?
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Review 1:
"...One of the great underrated films of the Eighties....A movie with a vision..."
Source: Film Comment
Review 2:
"...Vibrant....It's a kick to watch a lanky, fresh-faced Petersen..."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.76 12/05/2003
Review 3:
"[With] kinetic action scenes....Three new faces made significant early impressions..."
Source: USA Today
p.5E 12/12/2003
Review 4:
"...TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. is Friedkin at his glossiest....It's the car chases and shoot-outs and eye-catching settings that are truly the heart of the matter."
Source: New York Times
p.C18 11/01/1985
Review 5:
"...Engrossing....Extremely well cast....Everyone here seems capable of deception and moral duplicity, and then live up to those expectations..."
Source: Variety
10/30/1985
Review 6:
"Ridiculously entertaining car chase and all....The movie benefits from LA shimmer..."
Source: Uncut
p.158 11/01/2004