Blue Is the Warmest Color (originally titled La Vie d Ad?le ) is possibly the best film of 2013. Having won the Palm d Or at the Cannes Film Festival, it has already achieved remarkable acclaim for ...
The moral of “Blue Is the Warmest Color” is simple: Sex without love is nothing; life without love is even less. French filmmaker Abdellatif Kechiche’s story of sexual awakening and real love ...
Because that’s the way the American media works, you probably know Blue Is the Warmest Color as “that movie with the seven-minute (or “10-minute” or “20-minute,” depending on how hyperbolic the report ...
If you’ve ever wondered what a lesbian porn epic would look like, Blue is the Warmest Color is pretty damn close. But truly, it’s not pornographic: The film does include sex — lots of it — to ...
Blue is the Warmest Color (2013) is a French coming-of-age drama that delves into the passionate and complex love story between two young women, Adèle and Emma. Adèle, a young student, navigates her ...
Controversy swirled around Blue is the Warmest Color almost as soon as the film’s existence came to light. This almost three-hour, NC-17-rated love story about two females - one of whom is 15 years ...
An alert, inquisitive 17-year-old, Adèle (Exarchopoulos) is hungering for fireworks, fatedness, the coup de foudre of the great literature she adores. She stumbles into just that, in a glancing ...
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