Blue Valentine





Category: Drama
Year: 2010
Rating: 8.1/10 ()
Director: Derek Cianfrance
Country: USA
Language: English
Runtime:
120 min
Release Date:
27 December 2010
(Australia)
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Taglines:
A Love Story.
Writers:
Derek Cianfrance,
Joey Curtis,
and 1 more credit »
Movie Storyline
The film centers on a contemporary married couple, charting their evolution over a span of years by cross-cutting between time periods.
Cast:
Ryan Gosling
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Dean
Michelle Williams
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Cindy
Faith Wladyka
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Frankie
John Doman
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Jerry
Mike Vogel
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Bobby
Marshall Johnson
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Marshall
Jen Jones
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Gramma
Maryann Plunkett
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Glenda
James Benatti
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Jamie
Barbara Troy
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Jo
Carey Westbrook
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Charley
Ben Shenkman
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Dr. Feinberg
Eileen Rosen
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Mimi
Enid Graham
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Professor
Ashley Gurnari
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Checker
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-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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Color: Color
Filming Locations: Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
Soundtracks:
"We Belong"
Written by David Eric Lowen & Daniel Anthony Navarro Performed by Pat Benetar Courtesy of Capitol Records Under License from EMI Film & Television Music
Official Site(s):
Official site |
Trivia:
The screenplay won the 2006 Chrysler Film Project contest. The prize was $1 million of funding, courtesy of the Chrysler Brand and production company Silverwood Films.
User Review:
Sweet And Emotionally Devastating
, rated: 10/10
BLUE VALENTINE is both sweet and emotionally devastating. It's raw in
every sense of the word. Writer/director Derek Cianfrance has crafted a
brave and genuine relationship-character study. Ryan Gosling and
Michelle Williams floor me. Acting doesn't get better than this
Dramas about a couple whose relationship is warm and fuzzy at first but
then grows cold and bitter over time is not something new. You don't
have to go back to classic films in the 60s, you could just take last
year's indie Peter and Vandy for example. So there have been many
attempts to capture relationships on the big screen that's not
fantastical but more grounded and more honest. I believe that BLUE
VALENTINE has perfected it.
What's genius about Cianfrance's story is that the dialogue doesn't
hold any type of pretense to it. I attended the press screening and
read the press notes afterward and was amazed by the long, grueling
process that Cainfrance went through along with his stars Ryan Gosling
and Michelle Williams just to get the kind of characters they have in
mind. Some of the scenes you see in BLUE VALENTINE were contributions
of Gosling and Williams who had complete understanding of the
characters and the goal of the story. The story shows you the past, how
these two characters met, what made them fall for each other, romantic
and heartfelt.. and then.. the present, of what time does to a
relationship when communication is not clear anymore and
misunderstandings take over like an ugly bacteria that worsen every
situation, it just doesn't look hopeful from that point on.
Last year we had the film Precious which was a pretty heavy,
emotionally draining drama. This year is BLUE VALENTINE which serves
similar kick but it's less cinematic and even more performance-driven.
I can't even begin to fairly describe how astounding Gosling and
Williams are in this film. Their performances here will be the kind
that aspiring actors and theater students will learn from for years to
come. They're spontaneous and unadulterated. I'm completely amazed by
the way the play the fights and the arguments. As Dean and Cindy,
Gosling and Williams respectively convince you that they once love each
other and now they may or may not be able to stand each other's
presence.
Which leads me to the characters themselves, I don't think Cianfrance
created them so that you the audience would take sides or try to decide
which of them is right or wrong because I believe that these are two
individuals who eventually realize that they're living not just with
each other but also with regrets of the past, which make it very hard
to be grateful,.. you can tell that they're 'suffocated'.
One could argue that Cindy is right in that Dean seems too content,
like he doesn't have ambition, he's short tempered and very demanding.
And one could argue that Dean is right in that Cindy is too consumed by
the thoughts of what could've, would've, should've been if the her
choices had been different. Their relationship is not physically
abusive but it might as well be, there are times when things get
heated, you would think it's only a matter of time before somebody
would get seriously hurt.
It seems like somewhere along the way, Dean and Cindy just aren't in
the same wavelength anymore. Their unhappiness stems from the fact that
they no longer know how to make each other happy. Cianfrance wants to
remind the audience that marriage is hard, it's a lot of work and it
can get rocky, it's no laughing matter. If you're looking for a happy
ending or perhaps Dean and Cindy have a moment where they'd still be
friends, BLUE VALENTINE doesn't offer that, what it offers you is a
depiction of both the beauty and the hardship of relationship/marriage.
It speaks to those who may have grown up in a home where the parents
aren't your stereotypical love dubby mom and dad you see on 7th
Heaven-type soap operas. So if you don't come out appreciating BLUE
VALENTINE, not even for the performances, then it's possible that it's
because you're not the intended audience.
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