5 Jean Reno movies from the 1990s on 4K Blu-ray, ranked S to D by transfer quality. 2 S-Tier picks including Ronin.
dir. Brian De Palma
When Ethan Hunt, the leader of a crack espionage team whose perilous operation has gone awry with no explanation, discovers that a mole has penetrated the CIA, he's surprised to learn that he's the prime suspect. To clear his name, Hunt now must ferret out the real double agent and, in the process, even the score.
Paramount Pictures · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. John Frankenheimer
Capelight Pictures' German release is the canonical 4K with HDR, region-free 4K disc paired with a region B Blu-ray. John Frankenheimer's 1998 European spy thriller with the BMW M5 chase through Paris that car people quote scene by scene. De Niro and Reno as expat operatives chasing a McGuffin briefcase.
Capelight · 4K + Blu-ray (Germany)
dir. Roland Emmerich
French nuclear tests irradiate an iguana into a giant monster that viciously attacks freighter ships in the Pacific Ocean. A team of experts, including Niko Tatopoulos, conclude that the oversized reptile is the culprit. Before long, the giant lizard is loose in Manhattan as the US military races to destroy the monster before it reproduces and it's spawn takes over the world.
dir. Luc Besson
A-Tier Sony 4K. Luc Besson's hitman film with Jean Reno and a young Natalie Portman. Sony's steelbook artwork got some criticism. The disc scores well at 4.5 overall. Not a lot of dedicated collector energy around this specific release.
Sony Pictures · 4K + Blu-ray
A-Tier Sony 4K. Luc Besson's assassin film with Anne Parillaud. Sony and StudioCanal both have steelbook versions, and the consensus is that StudioCanal's is the better package if you're region-free. The Sony version dropped the Spanish subtitles and audio track that StudioCanal kept.
Sony Pictures · Steelbook (4K + Blu-ray)