Léa Seydoux and Adèle Exarchopoulos star in “Blue Is the Warmest Color.” (image via seriousfilm.blogspot.com) The first half of the movie — all of which is based on a 2010 graphic novel written by ...
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 ...
The Palme d'Or winner at Cannes this year, Blue Is the Warmest Color, is just fine with the NC-17 it received in America: its 10-minute lesbian sex scene has been the most discussed portion of the ...
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 ...
There were no jewel heists on the last day of the Cannes film festival, but there was gold being given out Sunday in the form of the festival's top prize, the Palme d'Or. The jury decided the award ...
Art has a way of harrowingly reminding us of the ugliest times in our lives and the ugliest parts of ourselves. And still, every time I hear a mention of the French movie “Blue Is the Warmest Color,” ...
Adèle is a high school student who is beginning to explore herself as a woman. She dates men but finds no satisfaction with them sexually, and is rejected by a female friend who she does desire. She ...
There she goes, that Pink, raising the bar all the way up to the ceiling of a sports arena. "The Truth About Love Tour," named after her sixth studio album, doesn't just impress with exhilarating ...
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