Blue (1993 film) explained

Blue
Director:Derek Jarman
Producer:James Mackay
Takashi Asai
Music:Simon Fisher Turner
John Balance
Momus
Peter Christopherson
Danny Hyde
Karol Szymanowski
Erik Satie
Brian Eno
Studio:Basilisk Communications
Uplink
Arts Council of Great Britain
Opal
BBC Radio 3
Distributor:Channel 4 (United Kingdom)
Zeitgeist Films (United States and Canada)
Runtime:79 minutes
Country:United Kingdom, Japan
Language:English

Blue is a 1993 British drama film directed by Derek Jarman. It is his final feature film, released four months before his death from AIDS-related complications. Such complications had already rendered him partially blind at the time of the film's release and he was only able to see in shades of blue.

The film was his last testament as a film-maker and consists of an unchanging entirely blue screen, to a soundtrack where Jarman's and some of his long-time collaborators' narration describes his life and vision.

Structure

The film is split into two halves, with differing strands of narration. The first story, intercut with the second, tells the adventures of Blue, as a character and color. Blue is described as getting into fights with other colors, "Yellowbelly scorches the earth with its accursed breath...", to adventures, "Marco Polio stumbles across the blue mountains...".

The other story features the day-to-day life of Derek Jarman, a gay man living in 1990s London, and the complications of living with AIDS. Some of the events mentioned are realistic and true, such as visiting a café with friends, discussing the war in Sarajevo, and having difficulty with day-to-day life, such as putting clothes on backward. Others feel more dreamlike, such as when Jarman wonders what is beyond the sky. This contrasts with thoughts of his health and how long he has left until he dies, the weakening of his body, and the eventual downfall of his eyesight.

There are also a handful of sections in which Jarman daydreams. The narration mentions walking across the sky, and wondering what an astronaut may be like.

The film's final moments consist of a set of names, being repeated. "John. Daniel. Howard. Graham. Terry. Paul". These names are all former lovers and friends of Jarman who had died of AIDS.

Jarman himself would succumb to AIDS on 19 February 1994 at the age of 52, just months after the film's premiere.

Cast

All narrators:[1]

Release and premiere

On its premiere, on 19 September 1993,[2] Channel 4 and BBC Radio 3 collaborated on a simultaneous broadcast so viewers could enjoy a stereo soundtrack. Radio 3 subsequently broadcast the soundtrack separately as a radio play and it was later released as a CD.

The film has been released on DVD in Germany and Italy. On 23 July 2007, British distributor 'Artificial Eye' released a DVD tying Blue with Glitterbug, a collage of Jarman's Super-8 footage.[3]

Cinematographer Christopher Doyle has called Blue one of his favourite films, calling it "one of the most intimate films I've ever seen."[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: On Color. Kastan. David Scott. Farthing. Stephen. Yale University Books. 2018. 9780300171877. New Haven. 115. 1005127035.
  2. Web site: Blue (1993). https://web.archive.org/web/20110110225457/http://ftvdb.bfi.org.uk/sift/title/492515?view=transmission. dead. 2011-01-10.
  3. Web site: A UK region 2 DVD review of BLUE and GLITTERBUG by Slarek . 7 August 2007 . cineoutsider.com . 6 September 2018.
  4. Johnston, Sheila (19 April 2005) Film-makers on film: Christopher Doyle telegraph.co.uk