

Three Colors: Blue | reviewed by: Gerry Carey | January 3, 2012
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featurettes | commentaries | deleted scenes | documentaries | digital extras | |
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Criterion's new Three Colors Blu-ray box set is an excellent showcase for Blue. The colors pop like never before.

genre | Drama | foreign |
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synopsis | Three Colors: Blue is the first part of Kieslowski's trilogy on France's national motto: Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity. Blue is the story of Julie who loses her husband, an acclaimed European composer and her young daughter in a car accident. The film's theme of liberty is manifested in Julie's attempt to start life anew free of personal commitments, belongings grief and love. She intends to spiritually commit suicide by withdrawing from the world and live completely independently, anonymously and in solitude in the Parisian metropolis. Despite her intentions, people from her former and present life intrude with their own needs. However, the reality created by the people who need and care about her, a surprising discovery and the music around which the film revolves heals Julie and irresistably draws her back to the land of the living. |
lead actors | Juliette Binoche | Benoît Régent | Florence Pernel | Charlotte Véry | Hélène Vincent | Philippe Volter |
director | Krzysztof Kieslowski |