Abstract

Films

Klawans, Stuart | December 12, 1994 issue

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This article focuses on the motion picture "Three Colors: Red." Although Krzysztof Kieslowski's Red works up to a full-scale tempest at sea, the heart of its story lies in old man's act of abnegation. Red consists of three complex, extended dialogues between Valentine and the judge. During the first, she discovers his eavesdropping, remonstrates with him and eventually lays bare her own woes, thereby bringing a moral dilemma into his study not as electronic voices but as flesh and blood. Valentine turns down an offer of tea, and so the judge, his eyes fixed on hers, spills the water he would boiled for her out of the kettle and onto the floor.

See Also:

THREE Colors (Film); KIESLOWSKI, Krzysztof; DIALOGUES; MOTION picture industry; MOTION pictures; LITERATURE
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