premiere at the 51st New York Film Festival. The film is being rated NC-17 for “explicit sexual content.” Sundance Selects will release the film in theaters beginning on October 25, after its U.S. rights to the film, which won the Palme d'Or at this year's Festival de Cannes, said it will not trim the film nor will it release the feature unrated. theaters once it heads into regular distribution. I think it's a beautiful result and beautiful film, I want to do beautiful films and it's not about me.A scene from Abdellatif Kechiche's Blue Is The Warmest Color.Ībdellatif Kechiche's controversial Blue Is the Warmest Color will screen uncut in U.S. Sometimes I would come in and say, 'I don't give a shit' because I knew that he would get what he wanted. With Abdellatif, I knew that he was going to film 100 takes. If I do too many takes, I'm too self-conscious. “I, for example, don't like to do too many takes. “It's not because you do 300 takes you're a genius – that is just his method,” says Seydoux. You just listened to his voice and you knew it wasn't useable – he was so drunk and saying things that weren't the subject of the film.”Īnd yet this is a film where it seems that the ends justified the means. The man who plays the Emma's stepfather is one of the producers and he was so drunk in one scene.
He wants to be close to the truth every time. He wants us to really be smoking a joint and drinking beer. “Abdel would kill me, he hates fabrication. “I didn't use any tricks to make myself cry,” says Exarchopoulos. Kechiche demanded a level of realism in every scene, clothed on or not. But for me it is more difficult to show my feelings than my body.” He was using three cameras, and when you have to fake your orgasm for six hours. Of course it was kind of humiliating sometimes, I was feeling like a prostitute. We can fake these things, you can't fake feelings, but you can fake body language.” Did they ever worry they were merely playing out a male fantasy? “Yes. You have something to protect and tape it under. Was there anything that she refused to do? “Yes, cunnilingus!” Seydoux laughs. And he shoots for such a long time, I was thinking, 'Man, you can stop there!'” “I was supposed to touch myself and it was supposed to be my fantasy and then when I opened my eyes and saw her we laughed so much. “The first time we filmed a sex scene, I was just laughing,” says Exarchopoulos. The actresses didn't know each other before filming began. Seydoux, right, and Exarchopoulos in Blue is the Warmest Colour Like David Fincher and Stanley Kubrick, Kechiche is a director who shoots hundreds of takes. They tell me that the acclaim for the film has calmed their nerves somewhat following a difficult and turbulent six-month shoot. While waiting to interview Seydoux, 28 and Exarchopoulos, 19, I can see them locked arm-in-arm, sharing gossip and sniggering. Off-screen, the actresses have clearly become firm friends.
Not least because of a six-minute- sex scene, which left many critics wondering if the action was simulated or not. One thing is certain, ever since the Cannes premiere of Kechiche's loose adaptation of Julie Maroh's graphic novel about two young lovers, the actresses have been the most talked about couple in film. Since then I've felt humiliated, dishonoured, living with a curse.” “The Palme d'Or win only gave me a brief moment of happiness. “The film is too sullied”, he told the French magazine Télérama. And now Kechiche has said that his prize winner should not even be released. The actresses were apparently unhappy with the director's methods. They happily posed for the cameras together when picking up the prize, but behind the scenes the three were at loggerheads. When it awarded the Palme d'Or to Blue Is the Warmest Colour, the Cannes Film Festival jury took the unusual step of sharing the prize between its director Abdellatif Kechiche, and its two principal actresses Léa Seydoux and Adèle Exarchopoulos.