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Thursday 4 December 2014

Three Colors Trilogy

Three Colors Trilogy



Celebrated Film Director Krzysztof Kieslowski's Three Colors Trilogy (Blue, White, and Red) is perhaps his most prominent work. All the three films showcases the makers’ craft and his mesmerizing visual narrative which make him an auteur one of his own kind. Blue, White and Red which also symbolizes the colors of France flag shows three different stories having three political ideals in the motto of the  French Republic: liberty, equality, fraternity.


Three Colors: Blue

First Film in the trilogy is Blue; the subject of the film is freedom, particularly passionate freedom, as opposed to its social or political significance. Set in Paris, the film is around a lady whose spouse and daughter are executed in a accident. All of a sudden set free from her familial bonds, she endeavors to cut herself off from everything and live in detachment from her previous ties, yet observes that she can't free herself from human associations.




Three Colors: White

Second Film in the trilogy is White; it depicts equality, with the film delineating Karol, a bashful man who, in the wake of being left by his wife in embarrassing circumstances in Paris, loses his cash, his residency, and his companions. As an issue embarrassed poor person in Warsaw, Karol starts his push to restore equity to his life through vengeance.




Three Colors: Red


Third and the last installment in the trilogy is Red. Red is about fraternity, which it inspects by indicating characters Valentine Dusseau, a model and Joseph Kern, a retired judge whose lives step by step get to be nearly interconnected when valentine runs over a dog which belong to a retired judge. It depicts how both characters are very much different still they ought to create a bond. Also, at the end of film Kieslowski connects all the three stories.


                                        

Sunday 26 January 2014

Memento (2000)


               Memento (2000) : 'Don't believe his lies' 



From time to time, a film that tests what we think about a motion picture to be goes along. Such films are an exceptional experience and they keep on lingering in one’s mind. In the most recent few years, such movies discharged incorporated Being John Malkovich , Requiem for a Dream, and Time Code. Joining this record is Memento.

Like the movies recorded, Memento requests a considerable measure from the crowd. Being inactive methods you wind up missing an essential some piece of the knowledge of viewing a film like this. The motion picture is told rearward, to represent the predicament of the hero, Leonard (Guy Pearce), who needs fleeting memory. This condition was initiated throughout a strike where (consistent with him) his wife was executed and his mind was harmed. Since Leonard recalls all the occasions that happened before he was ambushed, he is on a mission to vindicate his wife's demise.

The issue with being on a journey and having just fleeting memory is that you can effectively overlook that you recently completed what you began to do. In spite of the fact that Leonard utilizes an arrangement of Polaroid photographs and tattoos to stay informed regarding what he's finishing, its dependent upon him to record whatever he recognizes critical. At the minute of making a snap judgement, when he neglects to discover a pen, or when he's out of film, or assuming that he only decide to not record the data, then he's out of fortunes.

The film begins by indicating Leonard executing somebody, and it is soon implied that this individual could be the executioner Leonard was looking for. The film follow Leonard's steps rearward to attempt to delineate the rationale Leonard utilizes as a part of settling on his choice. In completing thus, the film additionally retracts the story, in ordered request, of Sammy (Stephen Tobolowsky), an individual who Leonard explored for protection misrepresentation and who experienced the same condition as Leonard does, and how their wives (Leonard's and Sammy's) obviously meet their end. This happens slowly and generally, both stories are quite obvious( (which would not joke about this excessively great to be accurate). The most dooming disclosures are made throughout the last minutes of the film, which outlines the way of Leonard's condition, and additionally his round mission (the punch line gives a real piece of information: "a few memories are best overlooked").




While some individuals think about the film as being noticeably questionable, I accept there are sufficient pointers to explain most issues (simply see the motion picture rearward). Case in point, Leonard, our hero, is purportedly helped by Natalie (Carrie-Anne Moss), who would appear to be a great individual. In any case, towards the closure, she issues a tirade which makes it clear precisely what her genuine intentions are. The last arrangements are the most telling, where an alternate individual who Leonard should trust, Teddy (Joe Pantoliano), lets him know what is truly happening since he has been with Leonard since the start of his mission. Leonard's response to Teddy's "truth", and a disappointment to record it, delineates the causes driving his activities.

The film's style of telling the story retrograde is intriguing, yet I'm starting to uncover that its truly not that hard to recount a story in this way. Take a couple of your favorite books (or even this survey), switch all the chapters/paragraphs, and with a touch of mental filler, you can effectively accompany the stories by and large.

The film truly is a masterpiece by its writer and director Christopher Nolan. It’s more like a experience than a film.

To watch this wonderful film please refer to the below YouTube link. Thank you! Enjoy the film. 



         

Friday 3 January 2014

A Separation (2011)


                                          A Separation (2011)




One of the best Drama film depicting how an divorce between a couple can affect the lives around it and the consequences of it.
Written and Directed by Celebrated Iranian Filmmaker Asghar Farhadi , A Separation won the Best Film award at the Oscars in Foreign Film category.

Watch this wonderful piece of work on YouTube with English Subtitles. Thank you!

                                    Part-1

           


                                                                    Part-2