Telluride 2008 Festival
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Red
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The concluding chapter in filmmaker Krzysztof Kieslowski's "Three Colors" trilogy, Red stars the luminous Irène Jacob as Valentine, a young student and fashion model who befriends a bitter former judge (Jean-Louis Trintignant, his character a proxy for Kieslowski himself). Their accidental meeting is just one of the many chance encounters woven through the narrative fabric of this feature, the most accomplished effort in Kieslowski's highly ambitious series. Like its predecessors, Red corresponds to a color of the French flag, as well as the color's symbolic attributes. The subject here is fraternity, and indeed, its central characters are all closely connected, their destinies locked on a collision course. The film's final scene even ties up the trilogy by bringing together the protagonists of the other features. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Movie Guide
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RisseladaRisselada Re: Best trilogy ever
by Risselada in Best Trilogies
loved it.
"The original Star Wars / Empire Strikes Back / Return of the Jedi will always be the best for me, but I would have to agree that Back to the Future is near perfect as well.I don't know if I would actually call Sergio Leone's and Clint Eastwood's "man with no name trilogy" a real trilogy since it just sort of uses the same character but wasn't really intended to be a trilogy from what I know. But they are great movies.The Mad Max trilogy is kind of fun too. With my favorite being Road Warrior, then Beyond the Thunderdome, then the original.Heh there are actually a couple movies that I have seen that are part of a trilogy and they are really good, but I haven't seen the rest of the movies in the trilogy.As for Dogville, I don't think the last movie has been made yet.However with the Three Colors Trilogy, I have seen Red, and it's so good I don't know why I haven't seen Blue and White yet.There are a few that I eally want to see but are hard to ge ... " [More]
lukasblulukasblu Re: Watch any good foreign film ...
by lukasblu in Travelling with film
hasn't rated it.
"how about movies with anne parilaud;The ones i have seen and liked are:La Femme Nikita (1990)the original version of point of no return with bridget fonda;It is about a woman convicted of crime and instead of getting the death penalty ,she is trained to become a hired assasin for the govt.Innocent Blood (1992)a funny vampire movie,Map of the Human Heart (1993)it is about foster /orphan eskimo boy and a half-breed little girl(french/indian) that meets at the the foster home and begins to like each other,later seperates and meet each other later in time;Very heartwarming moviethe three colors series of movies by Krzysztof Kieslowski :Three Colors: Blue(1993),Three Colors: White (1994),Three Colors: Red (1994) " [More]
JimBellJimBell Red
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
lost interest.
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"Red (Fraternity) is the last of Kieslowski’s famous trilogy, his last film, and a failure. The rational plot is straight-forward: A good, young female (Valentine played by Irene Jacob) meets a disgusting, old retired judge and gradually helps him become a bit more positive. In a sub-plot, a young lawyer, who is essentially identical to the judge, has a disasterous relationship with a woman. In the end, the young heroine, Valentine, and the young lawyer get together. Unfortunately, the linear plot does not drive Red. Rather a web of images and bits of themes create “visual rhyme” and thematic resonances. Unfortunately, this meant that I could not follow the film in the first viewing. First, I never meet Valentine’s suspicious boyfriend, and the young lawyer is always near Valenine but unseen by her, so I started to wonder whether her boyfriend was “the lawyer” spying on her rather than being in England or wherever he said he was. Second, there are ... " [More]
HairyLimeHairyLime Blue - Three Colors
by HairyLime in HairyLime Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Watched this one with the wife the other night. Came at this one rather blind, not really knowing what to expect. I knew it was part of a trio of films, and that the titles were in reference to the colors of the French flag, but other than that, rented it on a whim.Right away I was struck by how beautiful the look of the film was. Every scene was breathtaking, not due to anything spectacular about the scenery or the beauty of the actress (and she is, of course), but in the choice of camera angle, the color choices, the camera filters, the cutting (I love how the musical piece in the story would suddenly swell, and the picture would fade out, and then fade back in to the same exact scene), playing with the audience's expectations and helping us to get inside the character's head.The story was ambiguous, but told in a straightforward manner. Juliet Binoche's character survives a car crash that kills her famous composer husband and young daughter. She fails at an early sui ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
loved it.
The concluding film in his "Three Colors" trilogy, Krzysztof Kieslowski's Red (1994) explores the mysterious connections among isolated lives. From the opening shot, zooming through telephone lines for a call that ends in a busy signal, Kieslowski's intricately structured narrative plays off connections missed, accidental and intended, seductively weaving a story of interlocking destinies among the aptly named model Valentine, an embittered, eavesdropping retired judge, and a young jurist. While Kieslowski's mobile camera repeatedly links characters together, the presence of phones, dogs, and a giant billboard of Valentine also suggests bonds among them that will perhaps have a positive effect. With the composition and cinematography steeped in the title color, from orange-amber lighting to the judge's red-brown study, Kieslowski infuses the film with a redemptive warmth that belies its melancholy concerns with loss and loneliness. The themes of the "Three Colors" trilogy were loosely based on the colors of the French flag: Blue (liberty), White (equality), and Red (fraternity). Although the ending brings together all of the trilogy's themes, Kieslowski leaves the stories hanging -- but at a moment of deliverance. Red was nominated for Academy Awards for Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Cinematography. Upon its release, Kieslowski announced his retirement from moviemaking; he died in 1996. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 

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mavens
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most people
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Other opinions

Risselada
Risselada
loved it.
marincat
marincat
loved it.
usesoap
usesoap
loved it.
JimBell
JimBell
lost interest.
hosehead
hosehead
lost interest.
lordofdance
lordofdance
lost interest.