Lea seydoux blue is the warmest color

Presented by Sundance Selects | France | Oct 25th, | MINS | NR

The sensation of the Cannes Film Festival and the most controversial film of the year, Blue is the Warmest Color made cinema history as the first film ever awarded the Palme d’Or to both its director and its actresses.

Lea seydoux blue is the warmest color Archived from the original on 10 August But they're also strangely moving: no music or mood lighting or cheesy cross-dissolves or conveniently draped sheets. Retrieved 17 January Breaking News.

In a star-making role, Adèle Exarchopoulos is Adèle, a passionate young woman who has a yearning she doesn’t quite understand until a chance encounter with the blue-haired Emma ignites a flame and brings her to life. Léa Seydoux (Midnight in Paris) gives a fearless performance as Emma, the older woman who excites Adèle’s desire and becomes the love of her life.

Abdellatif Kechiche’s (The Secret of the Grain) intimate epic of tenderness and passion charts their relationship over the course of several years, from the ecstasy of a first kiss to the agony of heartbreak. Pulsing with gestures, embraces, furtive exchanges, and arias of joy and devastation, Blue is the Warmest Color is a profoundly moving hymn to both love and life.

Director

Executive Producers

  • Brahim Chioua
  • Abdellatif Kechiche
  • Vincent Maraval

Writers

  • Abdellatif Kechiche
  • Ghalia Lacroix

Official Site

  • Awards

    César Awards

    Won

    • Most Promising Actress - Adèle Exarchopoulos

    Golden Globe Awards

    Nominated

    • Best Foreign Language Film

    BAFTA Awards

    Nominated

    • Best Film not in the English Language
    • Palme d'Or

      Cannes Film Festival

    • Official Selection

      Telluride Film Festival

    • Official Selection

      Toronto International Film Festival

    • Official Selection

      New York Film Festival

Blue Is The Warmest Color