An interview with the star of Blue Is the Warmest Colour

Adèle Exarchopoulos chats with Xtra about her scorching performance


Blue Is the Warmest Colour’s Adèle Exarchopoulos chats with Daily Xtra about her breakout role and the challenges of on-screen sexuality.

Since its debut in May at the Cannes film festival, Blue Is the Warmest Colour (La Vie D’Adèle) has inspired rumours and controversy.

At first, Julie March, the author of the graphic novel that inspired the film, criticized its explicit sex scenes as being ridiculous and unrealistic. Then two of the film’s actors, Adèle Exarchopoulos and Léa Seydoux, publicly denounced the director’s tyranny on set and said they were uncomfortable with some of the things they were asked to do. As a response to these criticisms, the film’s director, Abdellatif Kechiche, wanted to prevent the film from being released because its reputation was so tarnished. If that weren’t enough, certain theatres in the US have banned the film because of its graphic depictions of lesbian love.

All this clouded the fact that Blue Is the Warmest Colour is a masterpiece. The film is sensual, erotic and passionate. It won the Palme d’Or in Cannes and none other than Steven Spielberg called it one of cinema’s greatest love stories of all time — whether gay or straight. This is no small feat.

Blue Is the Warmest Colour is a three-hour character study, based in a northern city in France, that chronicles a young woman’s coming of age, falling in love, and that love’s heartbreaking aftermath. The film is anchored by Exarchopoulos, a 19-year-old actor who gives a performance of such passion and range that it should garner her an Oscar nomination, if not the actual award. Exarchopoulous’s gorgeous face — in ecstasy, in tears, in puzzlement, in wonder, in love, in pain — is the reason Blue Is the Warmest Colour is so effective.

It was a challenging film, according to Exarchopoulous, who spoke to Xtra during this year’s Toronto International Film Festival. “Every scene was a kind of challenge,” she said. “The violent scene for me . . . [was] more difficult than the sex scene, even though sometimes you feel more vulnerable to be naked.”

She hopes the film will change perceptions of same-sex love. “The day when we won the Golden Palme, at the Cannes film festival, it was the day, it was the same day that they legalized gay marriage in France. That was just a coincidence, but for me, it was the best coincidence that could happen.”

 

Blue Is the Warmest Colour opens in limited release on Oct 25.

Keep Reading

Xtra Explains: Parental rights

What does Canadian law actually say when it comes to the rights of parents and trans kids?

Xtra Explains: Social vs. medical transition

Media and politicians like to fixate on the medical aspects of transition. But for most trans youth, social transition plays a much bigger part in their lives

Could Canadian conservatives copy Trump’s anti-trans messaging?

The president-elect’s final ad push—and subsequent election win—may have Canada’s right looking to lean in on anti-trans messaging

Xtra Explains: Detransition

In reality, only around three percent of trans people experience some form of regret