Netflix Home Show UNLIMITED TV PROGRAMMES & FILMS SIGN IN Oh no! This title isn’t currently available to watch in your country. 2h 52m | LGBTQ Films Determined to fall in love, 15-year-old Adele is focused on boys. But it's a blue-haired girl she meets on the street who really piques her interest. Starring:Léa Seydoux,Adèle Exarchopoulos,Salim Kechiouche
Original title: La vie d'Adèle
Adèle's life is changed when she meets Emma, a young woman with blue hair, who will allow her to discover desire and to assert herself as a woman and as an adult. In front of others, Adèle g... Read allAdèle's life is changed when she meets Emma, a young woman with blue hair, who will allow her to discover desire and to assert herself as a woman and as an adult. In front of others, Adèle grows, seeks herself, loses herself, and ultimately finds herself through love and loss.Adèle's life is changed when she meets Emma, a young woman with blue hair, who will allow her to discover desire and to assert herself as a woman and as an adult. In front of others, Adèle grows, seeks herself, loses herself, and ultimately finds herself through love and loss. See production, box office & company info
See more at IMDbPro
More like thisReview One of the best films I have ever seen. Go immediately. I saw this film as a preview, at 11am on a Sunday morning, whilst nursing a horrible cold and it was the best decision I have made in a long time. The film offers several basic and well used premises: the Eliza Doolittle/Henry Higgins: why won't you let me educate you thing, a dichotomy between big city and small city ideas and ideals and the well trotted out first love idea. However, the way this film is presented is entirely original. Kechiche sets it in Lille, a town in Northern France, full of provincial living and entirely captures how it is in general in this town - when the characters walk around you feel that he understands what he is talking about. The film is about desire, desire to eat, desire to sleep with someone, desire to dance and it is portrayed within a first relationship between two women. The two women are fantastic and the plot has amusing little french jokes interspersed between the very emotionally demanding relationship that has you gasping at points. However the story is largely about one of them, Adele - and you feel over the three hours, that you get to know her, what she is about, what she finds attractive, what she wants (or what she thinks she wants). The actress playing her has a wonderfully expressive face and she needs it for the amount that happens. When she cries, when she eats, when she sleeps you believe her. Much has been said about the sex scenes, which are very graphic, however these are entirely relevant to the plot and the furore seems to be about the actors criticising the director for pushing them too far, however, without this pushing this film wouldn't be nearly as good. When it finished, and I realised that it had been three hours I couldn't believe it. It was a revelation.
FAQ1Related newsContribute to this pageSuggest an edit or add missing content What is the streaming release date of Blue is the Warmest Colour (2013) in Canada? Answer
Recently viewedYou have no recently viewed pages Is Blue Is the Warmest Color on Netflix?The highly acclaimed coming-of-age romantic drama is now available on digital platforms.
Where can I watch Blue Is the Warmest Color on Netflix?Stream 'Blue Is The Warmest Color' on Netflix Instant Now.
Where can we watch Blue Is the Warmest Color?Watch Blue Is the Warmest Color | Netflix.
Why is Blue Is the Warmest Color controversial?In truth, it isn't sex per se that makes “Blue Is the Warmest Color” problematic; it's the patriarchal anxieties about sex, female appetite and maternity that leach into its sights and sounds and the way it frames, with scrutinizing closeness, the female body.
|