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Dan Conley’s Writing Projects

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22. Denouement

Three Colours: Blue

We arrive at the two scenes that bring all of the strands of “Three Colors: Blue” together. But I don’t want to write about them, not the same way I usually do. Recounting the dialogue, trying to describe the camera shots and the actors’ reaction, it’s all just

Dekalog 4 takes on a difficult subject matter, but it has universal meaning. The father-daughter element makes viewers squeamish. But the relationship between Anka and Michal could also be viewed as a stand-in for any impossible relationship surrounded by longing. Longing is the most difficult feeling because it pits our

23. Montage

Three Colours: Blue

Kieslowski hates happy endings, but “Blue” has earned one. I have resisted writing about the closing scenes of this movie for nearly a year, in part because I’m not entirely sure what’s going on with it. We hear the revised symphony on the soundtrack. It’s beautiful and

20. Mystery

Three Colours: Blue

I have noted before similarities between “Three Colors: Blue” and “Drive My Car.” Both movies include a highly mysterious character. But in the case of “Drive My Car,” it’s a character who dies early in the film. In “Blue,” it’s the protagonist herself who is a mystery. It’