Introduction

1001 movies you must see before you die. Must I? Let's see.

My name is Dagmar and I am from Czech Republic. I have a bachelor's degree in screenwriting. I study movies. I watch movies. I write about movies. I kind of mention movies a lot. I even cross stitch things I like in movies. My views on cinema could be described as peculiar. My views on the "1001 movies" list as complicated. It happens a lot that I get the feeling it wasn't that necessary to see some particular movies. Sometimes I'm really grateful I saw them. And there are also times when I don't watch any new movies for six months straight. And they keep adding new movies every damn year so I might have to never die to watch them all.

What's the score right now?
606/1245 - That's 639 left to see.
I started this experiment on July 3rd 2009 and the latest update was made on April 19th 2023.

You can find the full list here.

Wednesday, 24 June 2015

Blue Is The Warmest Color (2013)

La Vie d'Adèle - Chapitres 1 et 2
France/Tunisia/Belgium/Spain
directed by: Abdellatif Kechiche
written by: Abdellatif Kechiche, Ghalia Lacroix + Julie Maroh (comic book)
starring: Adèle Exarchopoulos, Léa Seydoux, Salim Kechiouche, Jeremie Laheurte
seen: 24th June, 2015

This film made me feel like there was somebody standing behind me the whole time, grabbing my neck and pushing my head closer to the screen. The pressure was so (sur)real I felt like I couldn't breathe properly at times. I don't like it when authors choose to show character's emotions through making them do nothing but smoke - smoking does not have any meaning, it just creates an illusion that the viewer should feel like there is something happening.

And I've been saying that a lot lately, but I was once not connecting with the story at all. The characters speak about love, but when I put their words together with what I see them do during their film existence, I have no idea what they mean by love. When somebody says "night life" I'd rather imagine graveyards, coffins and werewolves than clubs where no one can hear me speak. And when it comes to visualizing a relationship, I would like to see more fundamental details than who has what shaved.

I also didn't like the paintings supposedly done by Emma. The photorealistic bodies surrounded by colorful butterflies were so tiresome as the whole film. I have to agree with what one of my friend said: To show sex when everything is good and skip it when troubles arise instead of showing the sex reflecting the troubles is cowardly.

Yeah, and one last thing that surprised me when I was reading articles about this film: It certainly doesn't look like a work of a director who lets actors repeat one scene a hundred times to get what he really wanted. All the action is cut up into million shaky partial shots and nothing flows in longer takes - that does not look like a clear vision to me.


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