The segment begins with a long shot of Anka in bed. Given all that we have seen in this episode, we can’t be entirely sure that she’s in that bed alone — but she is. She’s awakened by clanking milk bottles. We will learn the significance of those
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After some silence and delay, the first thing Michal says next is that when he went away on long trips or found other reasons to be out of the house, he hoped something irreversible would happen. He wanted Anka to find someone, get pregnant and start a family so his
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
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
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’