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Sans retour

Original title: Southern Comfort
  • 1981
  • 12
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
24K
YOUR RATING
Sans retour (1981)
Trailer for South Comfort
Play trailer1:55
3 Videos
99+ Photos
Psychological ThrillerActionThriller

During a routine exercise, a team of National Guardsmen are threatened by angry and violent locals.During a routine exercise, a team of National Guardsmen are threatened by angry and violent locals.During a routine exercise, a team of National Guardsmen are threatened by angry and violent locals.

  • Director
    • Walter Hill
  • Writers
    • Michael Kane
    • Walter Hill
    • David Giler
  • Stars
    • Keith Carradine
    • Powers Boothe
    • Fred Ward
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    24K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Walter Hill
    • Writers
      • Michael Kane
      • Walter Hill
      • David Giler
    • Stars
      • Keith Carradine
      • Powers Boothe
      • Fred Ward
    • 193User reviews
    • 109Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos3

    Southern Comfort
    Trailer 1:55
    Southern Comfort
    Southern Comfort: Hunting Dogs Attack
    Clip 2:13
    Southern Comfort: Hunting Dogs Attack
    Southern Comfort: Hunting Dogs Attack
    Clip 2:13
    Southern Comfort: Hunting Dogs Attack
    Southern Comfort: Welcome To Louisiana
    Clip 2:12
    Southern Comfort: Welcome To Louisiana

    Photos106

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Keith Carradine
    Keith Carradine
    • Spencer
    Powers Boothe
    Powers Boothe
    • Hardin
    Fred Ward
    Fred Ward
    • Reece
    Franklyn Seales
    Franklyn Seales
    • Simms
    T.K. Carter
    T.K. Carter
    • Cribbs
    Lewis Smith
    Lewis Smith
    • Stuckey
    Les Lannom
    Les Lannom
    • Casper
    Peter Coyote
    Peter Coyote
    • Poole
    Alan Autry
    Alan Autry
    • Bowden
    • (as Carlos Brown)
    Brion James
    Brion James
    • Trapper
    Sonny Landham
    Sonny Landham
    • Hunter
    Allan Graf
    Allan Graf
    • Hunter
    Ned Dowd
    Ned Dowd
    • Hunter
    Rob Ryder
    Rob Ryder
    • Hunter
    Greg Guirard
    • Cajun Couple
    June Borel
    • Cajun Couple
    Jeanne-Louise Bulliard
    • Cajun Dancer
    • (as Jeanne Louise Bulliard)
    Orel Borel
    • Cajun Dancer
    • Director
      • Walter Hill
    • Writers
      • Michael Kane
      • Walter Hill
      • David Giler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews193

    7.123.6K
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    Featured reviews

    magicpowers

    Very impressed

    I just saw this film for the first time recently and I keep watching it over and over before I have to return it. I wasn't expecting such a great film. I agree with the Vietnam metaphor, but it was lighter fare being set in the Louisiana Bayou. There was never a dull moment and there was just the right amount of humor between the tension. The cast was great, most of the acting was very believable. It was surely one of Powers Boothe's best performances. One reason I enjoy it so much is because there isn't a lot of high-tech special effects. The bear-traps are quite effective. Also in the very tense last 20 minutes, there's blood & guts and it's real blood & guts. I was very creeped out when Hardin looks out a window and sees hangmen nooses being strung up. I'm affected every time. He can say more with his eyes than most people can with their mouth. His brooding intensity playing off of Carradine's lightness was perfect. Fred Ward was great too. I have not one bad thing to say about this movie and it's incorrect to say it is anti-Cajun. It's message was respect the natives. Sometimes we don't do that. I lived near quite a few National Guardsmen in Oregon, and, yes, the movie was believable in relation to them.
    7ananias73

    Civilization of Human Beings...

    Civilization vs. Nature rules. Or a powerful metaphor of Vietnam War a decade earlier. Most of all a film with great tension (that includes the Ry Cooder music themes) with good characterizations (especially that of Powers Booth as the Texan guy and Keith Carradine's in his last appearance in a above average film) from an "auteur" of the American Film Industry (Walter Hill in one of his best films among with "The Warriors" and "48th Hours") about the routine exercise of National Guardsmen in a swamp and the fatal battle with the local Cajuns. Nature's revenge in a strange way as in the familiar "Deliverance". Highly recommended
    9Coventry

    Thought Vietnam was rough? Wait until you visit the Cajun Swamps!

    Thank the heavens for John Boorman! If it hadn't been for his classic "Deliverance", we never would have had the stream of gritty and relentless "Backwoods" action & horror movies. Most of them are just a cheap excuse to make fun of stereotypical rednecks and depict gratuitous violence, but some are truly great films that come damn near to the quality level of "Deliverance" itself, like Walter Hill's "Southern Comfort". This exhilarating backwoods survival chiller uses some of the best exterior filming locations ever, the suspense and atmosphere of madness gradually builds itself up, the (almost) all-star cast is terrific and the violence is extremely rough at times. A nine-headed squadron of the Louisiana National Guard enrolls into a training practice in the Cajun Swamps and soon get lost. They borrow three canoes of the local population without asking and when one of the soldiers playfully (but stupidly) fires off blanks in their direction, the unseen Cajuns hillbilly-poachers respond with real bullets. This inflicts a disturbing cat and mouse game between the soldiers (with minimal ammunition and no knowledge of the area) and the seemingly invisible Cajuns (with their primitive hunting instincts and inventive booby traps). Usually in this type of flicks, it's obvious to choose which side you're on, but in "Southern Comfort" you have to think at least twice. The soldiers aren't exactly warm and friendly men, neither, and you're more than often tempted to think they're somewhat responsible for the mess they're in. After all, they did steal the canoes, they did set fire to one of the Cajun's homes and they did yell obscure things at them! The finale, set in an actual Cajun community, is truly nail-biting, absorbing and strangely educational, what with all the portrayal of typical rituals like dance parties and barbecuing! Another masterful period accomplishment from Walter Hill, who also made the brilliant cult classic "The Warriors" and the family-western "The Long Riders".
    9lost-in-limbo

    Southern Greetings.

    Now this is a atmospheric survival action film and Walter Hill at his peak. Love it! It's so simple (although streaming through it is a biting allegory about the Vietnam War), but nonetheless exhilarating, tense and raw film-making. Sure the acting and dialogues aren't master-class, but however they're commendably pulled off. In which case Powers Boothe (whose booming voice takes charge) and Keith Carradine (excellently pitched as the guy of reasoning) are terrific leads, and the support Fred Ward (a memorably hot-head and tooting turn), T.K Carter, Lewis Smith, Franklyn Seales, Peter Coyote and Brion James are also quite compelling. Tough, authentic and a real sense of claustrophobic tension stems from the actor's rapport and cynical script. This blends well with the brutal bloody violence (like the barnstorming climax with the powerful freeze frame closing) and the dank, devouring swamp terrain that ultimately swallows them up. But where I think it's at its most effective is during the interludes of Ry Cooder's fascinatingly folksy music score. Each time it creeps in, it demonstrates the right illustrations to the striking visuals and harrowing moods. Cooder's handling is multi-layered and truly echoing. From a relaxing southern flavour, to a haunting stillness and a punishing sting. It's cohesively perfect in it's random shifts. Hill's bravura direction holds up tautly, as the well-used slow motion is suitably done and the highly measured suspense piercingly infused. I liked how the hunters are kept as void-like background figures, because towards the end it makes the whole paranoid feeling and unease thrillingly justified.
    8HumanoidOfFlesh

    Violent and exciting survival thriller.

    A group of National Guardsmen led by Hardin(Powers Boothe)and Spencer(Keith Carradine)get on the bad side of swamp-dwelling Cajuns while conducting maneuvers in the bayou.Bloodshed ensues.Hardin and Spencer must then go on the run through the Louisiana swamps if they're to survive.This violent and exciting survival thriller owes a lot to John Boorman's fantastic "Deliverance".Walter Hill does a fine job of showing how an area as large as a bayou can be claustrophobic and the ultra-intense finale shows some top-notch editing.The acting is great and the script raises some serious questions about the behaviour of man."Southern Comfort" can also be seen as an allegorical treatment of the Vietnam conflict.8 out of 10.A must-see!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Writer-director Walter Hill later said he was "always amazed" by the reception to the film: "The American reception was a real kind of nothing. But it was very nicely received around the world."
    • Goofs
      During the dog attack, the protective pads on the men's arms are clearly visible.
    • Quotes

      Cajun Trapper: I ain't gonna kill y'all if I don't got ta... you got a bayou over dere... take it... stay to the west side... you're gonna find a road about a mile up dere.

      Hardin: Do you mind tellin' us what the Hell this is all about?

      Cajun Trapper: It real simple... we live back in here... dis is our home, and nobody don't fuck with us.

      Hardin: [pointing at Bowden, who is hanging dead from a tree] What about HIM?

      Cajun Trapper: What about 'im?

      Hardin: Did he do it to himself or did your friends help him out?

      Cajun Trapper: [fires shot at Hardin's feet] Now, if I was you all, I'd quit askin' questions and haul ass... 'cause my buddies... dey not nice like me.

      Hardin: Are we supposed to say thanks?

      Cajun Trapper: You not supposed to say nuttin'... soldier.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Stevie, Southern Comfort, Chariots of Fire, All the Marbles (1981)

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    FAQ26

    • How long is Southern Comfort?Powered by Alexa
    • How can the National Guardsman have such long hair?
    • Who are the hunters?
    • What happens to each of the soldiers?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 9, 1983 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Southern Comfort
    • Filming locations
      • Caddo Lake, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • Cinema Group Ventures
      • Phoenix Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $5,000,000
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $116,943
      • Sep 27, 1981
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 46m(106 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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