


#Blue is the warmest colour age rating movie#
The movie earned an NC-17 rating, and rightly so. Much has been made of 'Blue is the Warmest Color's graphic sex scenes. It's a slow, but deliberate and rewarding process. Exarchopoulos shows some astonishing acting skill by making us believe that she's really growing and evolving from a girl to a woman. With minimal makeup and costume changes, Adele appears to age as the movie presses on toward its lengthy 179 minute runtime. The movie covers a wide expanse of time – how much we're not really sure – and Adele grows right along with it. What's so intoxicating about 'Blue is the Warmest Color' is watching Adele grow from a teenager to a woman seamlessly. What transpires is a beautiful journey of one girl trying to figure out who she is, and another girl who finds love in all the wrong places.

She's attracted immediately to Emma, but it takes her a while to come to grips with her own sexuality. It's easy to tell that Emma is a lesbian, but up until this point we aren't sure what Adele is. The girl with blue hair is Emma (Lea Seydoux). Until, one day, she spots a blue-haired beauty on the street. She's searching for something more, but this is all she's got to work with. Adele's life is all surface deep up to this point. She tries to fit in, sidling up to the fringe of the group, laughing with them, smoking with them, but never really interacting with them. At the beginning she's unsure of herself around her friends. Like many teens she struggles to find an identity within her group of friends. 'Blue is the Warmest Color,' is adapted from Julie March's graphic novel "Blue Angel." In the film, Adele (Adele Exarchopoulos) is a young, confused French teen. The fevered anticipation of meeting someone interesting the enveloping ravenous lust that takes over when everything is so exciting and so new the slow-building love and admiration for another person the inevitable mistakes that lead to impending despair and the heartbreaking regret of what could have been. So rarely does a film perfectly encapsulate the epic journey of a single relationship.
