![]() ![]() Kechiche’s camera responds, showing us what love feels like too. It asks of the experience of love – what is it and what is it like? And it takes it further. If a film can achieve this I think it’s something special.’īlue is the Warmest Color is such a film, a very special film, a metaphysical exploration of intimacy. I concluded that ‘When we watch love on screen, we don’t just want to see it or hear people philosophising – we want to feel it. I wrote that while ‘the nature of romantic love remains a mystery to most of us’, film, as a visual medium, could help us get a little closer to figuring it out. Love is all.īack in 2012, writing about Terence Davies’ gorgeous film The Deep Blue Sea, I declared my preference for romantic dramas over romantic comedies as films that offered some insight into love. In Abdellatif Kechiche’s much debated, enormously intense and painfully beautiful film Blue is the Warmest Color, love is a fever. ![]() Love, when it strikes, can be a fire that ravages you, body and soul, day and night. ‘New lovers are nervous and tender, but smash everything. ![]()
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