Blue Is The — Warmest Color 2013
What follows is a masterclass in seduction and collapse. The narrative is broken into two "chapters"—the first dealing with longing and discovery, the second with the brutal erosion of intimacy. Kechiche films their relationship like a vérité documentary. We watch them fall in love in parks, discuss existentialism (Sartre makes a cameo), and navigate the class divide: Adèle wants to be a teacher, rooted in stability; Emma is a bohemian artist, drifting through bourgeois dinner parties.
: Adèle initially dates boys but finds herself unfulfilled, leading to vivid fantasies about Emma. The Relationship blue is the warmest color 2013
A subtler but crucial theme is the class divide. Emma’s family discusses philosophy and art over oysters and white wine. Adèle’s family eats pasta and meatloaf, discussing nothing deeper than daily life. Their breakup is less about sexuality and more about Adèle’s inability to bridge the gap between her working-class, emotionally simple world and Emma’s bourgeois, intellectual one. What follows is a masterclass in seduction and collapse