Discover reviews, ratings, and trailers for Blue Is the Warmest Color on Rotten Tomatoes. Stay updated with critic and audience scores today! Young love is a familiar movie subject, but "Blue Is the Warmest Color" is something rare. It captures the urgency and ease of first love, its romanticism, its physicality, its desperation, its.
REVIEW: BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR finally hits U.S theatres after riding a wave of acclaim and controversy that's already led to it being regarded as one of the most controversial movies of the. Blue Is the Warmest Color begins with Adèle (Adèle Exarchopoulos) as a junior in high school who catches the eye of an attractive male in her school. The problem is her circle of friends seem much more interested in him than she does.
They are the ones that encourage her to go on dates with him and then demand to hear the details afterwards. Blue Is the Warmest Color stars the remarkable newcomer Adèle Exarchopoulos as a high schooler who, much to her own surprise, plunges into a thrilling relationship with a female twentysomething art student, played by Léa Seydoux. Directed by Abdellatif Kechiche, this finely detailed, intimate epic sensitively renders the erotic abandon of youth.
Blue is the Warmest Color follows this relationship at the beginning and the end but skips over the middle in an interesting method to tell the story. Exarchopoulos and Seydoux are outstanding, and their characters feel lived in and real instead of outer skins worn by actresses. There is a vivid party scene at the middle of Abdellatif Kechiche's sprawling Palme d'Or winner Blue Is the Warmest Color (aka, in France, La Vie d'Adèle: Chapitres 1 et 2) that encapsulates some of the film's strengths and weaknesses.
Adèle (Adèle Exarchopoulos), a young schoolteacher who is feeling her way through early adulthood and her first serious love affair, has earnestly. Blue Is The Warmest Color - Overview/ Review (with Spoilers) Combining the romantic chemistry of young adult novels, lack of inhibition, a story which feels like a 600-page book you can't put down, you get Blue is the Warmest Color. 13.
Fredrik Fyhr 3 / 4 Translated from swedish: "Blue Is the Warmest Color" is a beautiful film, often touching, but it's marred by its fuzziness; it rushes through Adèle's life when it could instead make better use of its hefty runtime. The emotions it gives us are sometimes profound; the whole, however, is all the more superficial. Watching Blue is the Warmest Color provides viewers with that rarest of motion picture opportunities: the ability to lose oneself in the life of another for three hours and to emerge having felt something.
When we first meet Adele, she's a junior in high school. Kechiche doesn't rush the introduction.