OMDB
Home Movies Series Search
OMDB

Built by Torkel Aannestad with Next.js Next.js and shadcn/ui shadcn/ui.

Data provided by TMDB.

GitHubSource code
Three Colors: Blue
Three Colors: Blue

Three Colors: Blue (1993)

77% User Rating
1h 38min
Drama

The wife of a famous composer survives a car accident that kills her husband and daughter. Now alone, she shakes off her old identity and explores her newfound freedom but finds that she is unbreakably bound to other humans, including her husband’s mistress, whose existence she never suspected.

Krzysztof KieślowskiDirector

Cast

View Cast & Crew
Juliette Binoche

Juliette Binoche

Julie

Benoît Régent

Benoît Régent

Olivier

Florence Pernel

Florence Pernel

Sandrine

Charlotte Véry

Charlotte Véry

Lucille

Hélène Vincent

Hélène Vincent

Journalist

Philippe Volter

Philippe Volter

Real Estate Agent

Claude Duneton

Claude Duneton

Doctor

Hugues Quester

Hugues Quester

Patrice (Julie's Husband)

Emmanuelle Riva

Emmanuelle Riva

Mother

Florence Vignon

Florence Vignon

The Copyist

Daniel Martin

Daniel Martin

The Downstairs Neighbour

The Movie Database

Jacek Ostaszewski

The Flutist

The Movie Database

Catherine Therouenne

The Neighbour

Yann Trégouët

Yann Trégouët

Antoine

The Movie Database

Alain Ollivier

The Lawyer

Isabelle Sadoyan

Isabelle Sadoyan

Maid

Pierre Forget

Pierre Forget

Gardiner

Philippe Manesse

Philippe Manesse

Arno Chevrier

Arno Chevrier

Idit Cebula

Idit Cebula

The Movie Database

Stanislas Nordey

The Movie Database

Jacques Disses

The Movie Database

Michel Lisowski

Yves Penay

Yves Penay

Philippe Morier-Genoud

Philippe Morier-Genoud

The Judge

Julie Delpy

Julie Delpy

Dominique

Zbigniew Zamachowski

Zbigniew Zamachowski

Karol Karol

Alain Decaux

Alain Decaux

Eulogist at the Funeral

Julie Gayet

Julie Gayet

Barrister at the Court of Justice (uncredited)

Reviews (2)

All Reviews
Filipe Manuel Neto
Filipe Manuel Neto
Rating 70%

January 10, 2023

**Pain, tragedy, mourning, mental and psychological anguish, a cathartic journey towards freedom, in a film that is not for all audiences.** It took me three tries to get through this movie in its entirety. As someone who is currently going through a very difficult grieving process, it was particularly hard for me to watch the film. It all starts with a serious car accident where the main character, July, loses her husband and daughter. She, like myself, feels a need to escape, to isolate herself from others, and she almost annuls herself by not bearing the pain and absence of her lost family. As the film is a kind of metaphor around the concept of freedom, to what extent is it liberating to have these attitudes? I sincerely do not know. As much as we run away, our pains don't stop confronting us, we never stop being who we are. In the midst of all this, the film also launches considerations on the hopes and paths of the European Union project through the troubled completion of a symphony, commissioned by the Union and left incomplete upon the death of July's husband, who was its composer. I didn't know the director Krzysztof Kieslowski, and I believe that few people will. He is one of the directors who never leaves the festival circuit due to his enormous erudition. I don't believe, in fact, that he made films of a more commercial nature. This film won't please everyone, being relatively indigestible and uncomfortable, cold and depressing like the color that gives it its name. The cinematography is very talented, it is full of artistic resources, frames of great visual value and beauty, cold colors where blue predominates and is omnipresent in almost the entire work. We cannot fail to highlight the excellent interpretive performance given here by Juliette Binoche, in one of the most intense, poignant and strong cinematographic works of her career as an actress. Benoit Regent and Charlotte Véry didn't do a bad job either, and each in their own way give a very important support to Binoche's work, but it is the main actress who, due to her enormous merit, sustains the film and really plays. I didn't want to stop writing a few lines about the soundtrack of this film: the film is not particularly sound, as the insertion of music is quite punctual, thought out and meticulously articulated with what we are seeing. And instead of using several melodies, or ordering a vast array of incidental pieces, the film uses only one song, which is called “Song for the Unification of Europe” and was composed by Zbigniew Preisner. Made in the period after the Treaty of Maastricht, the film is very "Europeist", which is ironic given the prevailing Euroscepticism nowadays, thirty years later.

Media

View All Media
'' three colours blue '' - official trailer 1993.

'' three colours blue '' - official trailer 1993.

Three Reasons: Three Colors: Blue

Three Reasons: Three Colors: Blue

Three colours - Blue

Three colours - Blue

Recommended

View All Recommended
Three Colors: White
Three Colors: Red
The Double Life of Véronique
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
The Firemen's Ball
Birdman of Alcatraz
Golmaal – Fun Unlimited
Post Tenebras Lux
The Wait
The 4th Man
Ghosts of Sugar Land
Cesar and Rosalie
A Quiet Passion
Summer Hours
Hannah
Attenberg
Miss Oyu
Job: The Last Grey Cell
Piccolo, Saxo & Cie
Umjolo: There Is No Cure

Collection

Three Colors Collection

Part of

Three Colors Collection

Includes: Three Colors: Blue, Three Colors: White, Three Colors: Red