I received the limited edtion as a holiday gift, and what a surprise. The whole thing, inside and out, exhudes high quality. The pacakge comes in a hard, book-shaped case that folds out with a cool magnetized snap cover to reveal an inner sleeve housing several postcard-sized poster reproductions; a listing of DVD scene selections and CD tracks; a thick booklet of fascinating liner notes comes wrapped in tissue paper.
Regarding the DVD quality: Although this rare film is from 1975, the image is immaculate and sharp with rich, vibrant colors. The sound is available in French mono, a German & English dub, and comes with removable English subtitles in a choice of white or yellow.
Next is a separate CD of the melodic, haunting score by George Delerue that has never before been released. Again, the quality is excellent.
There's also a host of extras, none of which I've gotten to yet, but can't wait to check out: an audio commentary with the director, a video interview, image restoration, theatrical trailer, image gallery.
Oh, and what about the film? Well, if you're reading this, you've probably either seen or know something about it already. But even if you're new to it, in my humble opinion, it's fantastic. A Euro-cult film lover's dream.
Overall, bravo to Mondo Vision. This incredible release rivals the best of Criterion and I look forward to supporting them by snapping up their other Zulawaski special editions soon.