Blueis the Warmest Colour arrives on UK Region B-locked Blu-ray courtesy of Artificial Eye, who appear to have sourced their own 1080p/AVC-encoded High Definition transfer of the film rather than used the same highly regarded one as Criterion. Whilst it is impossible to comment on any differences, this video presentation, framed in the movie's original theatrical aspect ratio of 2.4:1
Blueis the Warmest Color was shot in HD and, predictably, looks excellent on Blu-ray from Criterion (Director approved!). The 1080P image is dynamically sharp with brilliant detail, true colors and tons of depth. This is dual-layered with a, reasonably, high bitrate for the 3-hour film.
Thefilm team review Spectre Guardian. There's one male director with whom Seydoux had a thorny experience - Abdellatif Kechiche, on Blue Is the Warmest Colour. This tale of an intense
Blueis the Warmest Color is receiving more attention (and stirring up more controversy) than any French film since The Artist.The title's translation is odd, even if it sounds nice. The French title stresses the protagonist's character and life arc, and also alludes to a classic novel, La Vie de Marianne (by Marivaux), mentioned in the movie.It illustrates Adele's literary side, and how
Lastspring Blue is the Warmest Color won the Palme D'Or at Cannes, as did its stars Léa Seydoux and Adèle Exarchopoulos (making them the only women other than Jane Campion to ever win the Palme).The film is nothing short of epic — chronicling a young lesbian's coming of age while she falls deeply in love with a smoldering blue-haired artist.
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blue is the warmest color film review