Three Colors Blu-ray (DigiPack) (original) (raw)

| United States | | | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |

DigiPack / Trois couleurs Criterion | 1993-1994 | 3 Movies | 290 min | Rated R | Nov 15, 2011

| | | VideoCodec: MPEG-4 AVCResolution: 1080pAspect ratio: 1.86:1Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1 AudioFrench: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 (48kHz, 24-bit) French: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 (48kHz, 24-bit) (less) Subtitles English DiscsBlu-ray DiscThree-disc set (3 BD-50) PackagingSlipboxDigiPackBookletPlayback2K Blu-ray: Region A (locked) | | PriceList price: $85.99Used from: $54.00 (Save 37%) Buy used on Amazon Buy Three Colors on Blu-ray PriceBuy on:We may earn a commission from purchases made using our links. Thanks for your support!Rating 8.2/10 863 ratings **93%**popularity n/afans | | - | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |

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Three Colors

(1993-1994)

Three Colors Blu-ray delivers great video and reference-quality audio in this must-own Blu-ray release

See individual titles for their synopses.

For more about Three Colors and the Three Colors Blu-ray release, see Three Colors Blu-ray Review published by Dr. Svet Atanasov on November 11, 2011 where this Blu-ray release scored 5.0 out of 5.

Director: Krzysztof Kieslowski
Writers: Krzysztof Kieslowski

, Krzysztof Piesiewicz, Agnieszka Holland, Edward Zebrowski, Edward Klosinski
Starring: Juliette Binoche, Julie Delpy, Zbigniew Zamachowski, Beno�t R�gent, Jacques Disses, Michel Lisowski
Producer: Marin Karmitz

This Blu-ray bundle includes the following titles, see individual titles for specs and details:

Three Colors Blu-ray Review

Reviewed by Dr. Svet Atanasov, November 11, 2011

Krzysztof Kieslowski's Three Colors (1993-1994) trilogy arrives on Blu-ray courtesy of Criterion. The supplemental features in this 3-disc collection include new and exclusive video interviews with actors Irene Jacob and Zbigniew Zamachowski, cowriter Krzysztof Piesiewicz, and composer Zbigniew Preisner; selected scene commentary by Juliette Binoche; essays by professor Annette Insdorf, film critic Tony Rayns, and film writer Dennis Lim; early films by Krzysztof Kieslowski; making of featurettes; additional interviews with producer Marin Karmitz and film editor Jacques Witta; original theatrical trailers; and more. The collection also arrives with an 80-page illustrated booklet featuring essays by Colin MacCabe, Nick James, Stuart Klawans, and Georgina Evans; excerpts from the book Kieslowski on Kieslowski; interview with the Polish director conducted, edited, and translated by writer Danusia Stok; and interviews with the cinematographers of Three Colors - Slawomir Idziak, Edward Klosinski, and Piotr Sobocinski. In French and Polish, with optional English subtitles for the main features. Region-A "locked".

Julie

Blue

During a horrific car accident somewhere in the French countryside, Julie (Juliette Binoche) loses her husband, an acclaimed European composer, and young daughter. She is found unconscious and quickly transported to a Parisian hospital. In the days after the accident, her wounds begin to heal but her soul hurts so bad that she attempts to commit suicide -- and fails.

Immediately after she is released from the hospital, Julie begins erasing her past. First, she sells her house, then she burns the scores of her husband's unfinished composition. She also makes love to one of his best friends (Benoit Regent) -- to make sure that she is still alive and has retained the ability to feel -- and rents a small apartment in downtown Paris. Around the same time, she is approached by one of her neighbors (Charlotte Very), a single young woman making ends meet in a sex club on Place Pigalle, who wants to be friends with her.

In the months after the accident Julie begins to forget. Her mind and heart insist that she spends all of her time alone, but occasionally she visits a nearby cafe and listens to the sounds of the world moving around her. After one of these trips to the cafe, her neighbor phones and asks for help. At the club, where the two meet, while looking at a TV monitor running a report about her husband's unfinished composition, she accidentally discovers that he had a mistress (Florence Pernel).

A few days later, Julie and her husband's mistress meet and quickly conclude that both were genuinely loved by the same man. They also concede that their lives have been permanently scarred, but because of their loss, both have learned to appreciate them even more. After the two part ways, Julie finally regains her freedom.

The first of the three films in Krzysztof Kieślowski's brilliant Three Colors trilogy, Blue, captures the essence of loss like no other contemporary film does. The focus of attention, however, is not on its dramatic and often destructive effects, but on the transition period where one slowly moves away from it.

The film is quiet, elegant, and often indescribably beautiful, but incredibly cruel as well. However, despite its tremendous intensity, it is completely free of melodrama. Julie does everything a devastated person would and gradually comes to realize that the man she loved and lost was a stranger. It is a disappointing, painful realization but a liberating one as well.

Blue, one of the three colors of the French national flag, has a prominent role throughout the entire film as it is directly linked to Julie's efforts to regain her liberty. (Libert�, �galit�, fraternit� is the national motto of France). However, the film does not attempt to define or politicize liberty. It simply suggests that liberty is elusive, perhaps even mythical.

White

Karol Karol (Zbigniew Zamachowski) is a Polish immigrant living in Paris. He is extremely poor, possibly impotent, and without papers. His beautiful French wife, Dominique (Julie Delpy), wants a divorce because, among many other reasons, their marriage was "never consummated".

But Karol refuses to divorce Dominique, so to punish him she sets her beauty salon ablaze and sends the police after him. While hiding in the subway, Karol then meets another Polish immigrant (Janusz Gajos), a jaded professional poker player that has made enough and is getting ready to retire, who offers to help him go back home.

In Warsaw, Karol begins working in his brother's hair salon. Soon after, a happy client suggests that if Karol wants to earn more he should start working as a bodyguard for her brother, a cocky young man who owns a currency exchange bureau. A few days later, Karol is given a gas pistol and instructed how to walk and talk so that he looks like a real bodyguard.

Not only does the new job prove as good as advertised, but it quickly awakens Karol's business instincts and he decides to take advantage of a seemingly perfect opportunity to make a big chunk of money quickly. After he reconnects with the man from the subway, the two become business partners and begin importing and exporting anything that they can get for a good price, from frozen bananas to Chinese knock-off merchandise.

Eventually, Karol puts together a brilliant revenge plan. With the assistance of his business partner, he manages to bring his wife to Poland, frame her just as she did him in Pairs, and have her arrested by the local authorities. However, her misery makes him realize that he is still madly in love with her.

Like Blue, White tells a multi-layered story about a unique transition. After the fall of the Iron Curtain, Poland has regained its freedom but Poles have discovered that they do not know what to do with it. Unsurprisingly, the mafia has taken over the country, started reshaping it, and forced many Poles to look for a better life abroad.

Karol has ended up in France, a free and prosperous country, a true democracy. But he has quickly realized that the people living there are not all equal, and those like him, the poor immigrants, are possibly even not allowed to be equal. This is why he returns home, where he could give his wife a dose of the same inequality he has endured thanks to her.

As was the case with Blue, a single color permeates the entire film. Here it is white, which symbolizes equality, the second of the three French national symbols. A stunning score by Zbigniew Preisner again complements the visuals.

Red

In the third and final film in Krzysztof Kieslowski's Three Colors trilogy, Valentine (Irene Jacob), a beautiful model living in Geneva, ends up in the home of a retired judge (Jean-Louis Trintignant) after her car accidentally strikes his dog. His indifference towards the dog irritates her but his hobby -- spying on his neighbor and recording his phone calls -- fascinates her.

After the dog recovers at her place, Valentine visits the judge again, and much to her surprise, he reveals why he wiretaps his neighbor. Valentine learns that the judge's neighbor is a middle-aged man, wealthy and married, most of the time looking incredibly happy. But she also learns that he has many secrets, some dangerous, some sad. The man's wife does not know about them, but his daughter does.

While struggling to decide whether to confront the man and save his family, Valentine begins a most unusual relationship with the judge that forces her to reexamine how she defines right and wrong. She discovers that it is easier to be good when you do not know enough, but very difficult to do the right thing when you know everything.

While Valentine's relationship with the judge evolves, the camera becomes interested in the progression of a second relationship between two young lovers, Auguste (Jean-Pierre Lorit) and Karin (Frederique Feder). Even though the two are committed to each other, eventually fate separates them and arranges that Auguste meets Valentine.

Red is a marvelous puzzle of a film about the cosmic force that determines how people meet, how they fall in love, how they live, and how they die. It tells two great stories, but it is the thoughts and feelings it evokes that captivate the viewer's imagination. Anyone could recognize a familiar piece in the puzzle and reflect on its meaning.

The consensus among critics and fans of the Three Colors trilogy is that Red is the most elegant film. In it, light, shadow, and color are united in a truly special way by cinematographer Piotr Sobocinski. Like Blue and White, Red greatly benefits from another remarkable score composed by Zbigniew Preisner.

Red was Kieslowski's final film. In 1996, two years after Red premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, the director passed away at the age of fifty-five.

Three Colors Blu-ray, Video Quality

4.0 of 5

Presented in an aspect ratio of 1.86:1, encoded with MPEG-4 AVC and granted 1080p transfers, Krzysztof Kieslowski's Blue, White and Red arrive on Blu-ray courtesy of Criterion.

The following text appears inside the booklet provided with the Three Colors trilogy:

"The new high-definition digital transfers of Blue and White were created from 35mm interpositives, while the new high-definition transfer of Red was created from the original 35mm camera negative. Thousands of instances of dirt, debris, scratches, splices, warps, jitter, and flicker were manually removed using MTI's DRS, while Image System's DVNR was used for small dirt, grain, and noise reduction.

Project supervision: MK2 and Arte, at Eclair Laboratories, Paris.
Telecine colorist: Pascal Novak/Eclair Laboratories, Paris."

Blue

The Blu-ray release offers dramatic improvements in terms of detail and color-reproduction. Close-ups have notably stronger depth and clarity, while the darker scenes are free of the the macroblocking patterns that plagued the old R1 DVD release of the film (part of the Thee Colors DVD boxset Miramax produced in the U.S.). Edge-enhancement is also not a serious issue of concern, though there are a few sequences where sporadic harshness tries to creep in. Colors are lusher and better saturated, never bleeding or looking anemic. The prominent blues, in particular, look very strong, but it would be interesting to see how they compare to the blues from the upcoming Artificial Eye Blu-ray release. Finally, though it has been toned down, some light noise is present (most likely inherited from the French master MK2 also used for their Blu-ray release of Blue). In motion, however, the image conveys pleasing fluidity and does not suffer from prominent artifacts. For the record, there are no serious stability issues to report in this review.

White

White was the most problematic of the three films when it appeared on DVD. It was rife with heavy macroblocking and suffered from serious sharpening. The film's transition to high-definition is far more impressive. Detail is very good, clarity dramatically improved, and colors effectively stabilized. The majority of the close-ups that used to look soft and hazy now have pleasing depth (see screencapture #13), while the delicate sequences with the diffused light and soft whites (the church sequences) look natural. Edge-enhancement is again not an issue of concern, but I did notice a few scattered artifacts when the action moved to Warsaw. Mild noise is also present, but as it was the case with Blue it is never overwhelming. Lastly, the edge flicker that is present on the R1 DVD release of White has been effectively addressed. The image is now stable and tight around the edges.

Red

Of the three films in the trilogy, Red has the strongest high-definition transfer. Close-ups convey very good depth and pleasing detail, while many of the outdoor scenes now have that special dreamy look Piotr Sobocinski's unusual lensing accomplished (see screencapture #35). Light and light reflections, in particular, have a very special role in Red, and now for the first time their function can be understood and appreciated. On the R1 DVD release of Red all of these light effects and soft reflections looked like byproducts of a very weak and incompetent transfer, when in reality they were simply impossible to accurately replicate because of resolution and color reproduction limitations. Lastly, some extremely light noise still remains, but grain is generally well resolved and never appearing static. There are no traces of problematic denoising. There are no serious stability issues to report in this review either. (Note: All three Blu-ray discs in the Three Colors trilogy are Region-A "locked". Therefore, you must have a native Region-A or Region-Free PS3 or SA in order to access their content).

Three Colors Blu-ray, Audio Quality

5.0 of 5

Each of the three films in Three Colors trilogy arrives with a French DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 track (with large portions of Polish in White) and optional English subtitles.

The following text appears inside the booklet provided with the Three Colors trilogy:

"The original 2.0 surround soundtracks were remastered at 24-bit from the original 35mm magnetic tracks. Clicks, thumps, hiss, and hum were manually removed using Pro Tools HD. Crackle was attenuated using AudioCube's integrated workstation."

The three loseless audio tracks are outstanding. Hearing the clarinet solo followed by the bright strings in Red or the trumpets in Blue followed by the choir and then the full orchestra is quite an experience. Even Karol's sad improvisations in the Paris subway sound wonderful. Indeed, there is depth and clarity that are at times simply overwhelming, because Zbigniew Preisner's scores are absolutely perfect. On the other hand, the dialog is crisp and clean, well balanced with the music and always easy to follow. There are no audio dropouts, sync issues or distortions to report in this review either. The English translation on all three films is excellent.

Three Colors Blu-ray, Special Features and Extras

5.0 of 5

Blue

White

Red

Three Colors Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation

5.0 of 5

Krzysztof Kieslowski's Three Colors trilogy is rightfully regarded as one of the great triumphs of European Cinema. Named after the colors of the French flag and symbolizing the three French national principles - liberty, equality, and fraternity - Blue, White, and Red are mesmerizingly beautiful and profoundly moving films showcasing a director at the height of his power and artistry. Criterion's presentation of these three legendary films is enormously satisfying. VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.

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