Lost ball 3 announces its upcoming release on Netflix with a poster that already promises crumpled metal.
Over the years, it is clear that Netflix has been able to impose its mark on the French cinematographic and television landscape (if not paying taxes…). This is particularly the case in the realm of action, where the saga Lost ball has become the leader of a French revival in terms of suicidal stunts and venerable tatanes.
Drawing as much on the side of French classics (the films of Belmondo) as on a more American energy (we think as much of Fast & Furious than to Michael Bay), Guillaume Pierret's diptych exudes a generosity that is pleasing, and we had fun talking with the filmmaker to explore the particularities of his methodology on video.
Suffice it to say that we are impatiently waiting Lost ball 3the final part of a trilogy which promises to end with a grand finale. Netflix rightly teased the arrival of the film with a first poster.
Lost ball 3: go higher
With a car that flies away after leaving the roadthe poster of Lost ball 3 doesn't seem to be lying about the goods, that is to say the return of a chase film filled with crashes of all kinds and logistical tours de force. If the saga partly drew its singularity from its settings (Occitanie), the third part promises to exploit its landscapes again, while opening up to other horizons.
As for the characters, Alban Lenoir will be back in the shoes of Lino, accompanied by Stéfi Celma (Julia) and Nicolas Duvauchelle (Areski). For the occasion, Guillaume Pierret joined forces to write with the author of detective novels Caryl Férey (he notably scripted Kompromat by Jérôme Salle). In The Parisianthe director returned to the issues of this latest sequel:
“Lost Ball 3 will be an almost direct sequel to 2, with small returns to the past, to clarify gray areas of certain characters. It will also be a slightly more ensemble film than the previous ones, because there is the trajectory of many characters to conclude. »
Lost ball 3 doesn't have a specific release date on Netflix yet, but it will be in 2025.