Only one chap notices and tells her to relax and let him serve her some spaghetti (AGAIN!) and all the while Emma (whom it should be noted at this point I think is a fucking dick) has the audacity to spend the whole night flirting with some pregnant woman. In a scene where she spends all day preparing to host Emma’s artsy pals, I’m filled with rage as she tends to them all more like a waitress than Emma’s girlfriend. Though she is accepted by Emma’s family, Adèle is visibly uncomfortable around her friends. Emma is an art graduate and she brings Adèle into her world of colourful characters* and introduces her to her family, who are very accepting of the two of them. Adèle’s family are more conservative and so she introduces Emma as a friend helping her with her studies. Daaamn.Īdèle and Emma begin to spend a lot of time together and before you know it, they’re at it. Seriously, everyone is constantly eating spaghetti in this film and it looks so good, y’know like in cartoons when they eat pizza. The main thing I took away from this film was a huge hunger for spaghetti. This relationship doesn’t last long as Adèle quickly becomes dissatisfied. She ends up following her curiosity all the way to a lesbian bar to find a blue-haired girl, Emma (Léa Seydoux), whom she previously spotted in the street and had a suuuuper sexual dream about. This turns out to be true and the two end up seeing eachother and doin’ it. Her friends at school just gossip about BOYS and suggest that one of the cuter ones fancies Adèle. The film is based on a French graphic novel, Le bleu est une couleur chaude, and follows the story of Adèle (Adèle Exarchopoulos), a young student experiencing a sexual awakening who in turn becomes troubled by her sexual identity. Having now seen it, I can confirm that both of these facts are true, it is very much “that French film about lesbians” but there’s a lot more to it.
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Recently I tuned in to watch Blue Is The Warmest Colour, knowing little about it except that it was French and it was “about lesbians”.