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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.