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Synopsis

The second feature in filmmaker Krzysztof Kieslowski’s “Three Colors” trilogy, the black comedy White features Zbigniew Zamachowski as Karol Karol, an expatriate Polish hairdresser whose French wife (the breathtaking Julie Delpy) divorces him after just six months of marriage because of his impotency. Penniless and devoid of his passport, Karol must journey back to Poland by hiding in a trunk. Upon his return, he slowly begins amassing a considerable fortune, ultimately hatching a perverse plot for revenge. Often unjustly dismissed as the weak link in the trilogy, White grows in strength upon repeated viewings. An allegory about equality, the film is mordantly witty, a cynical look at power, marriage and capitalism.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:131195 )

Director

Krzysztof_kieslowski

Krzysztof Kieslowski

A towering figure of Eastern European cinema, Krzysztof Kieslowski was born in Warsaw, Poland, on June 27, 1941. His formative years, spent under the specters of Hitler and Stalin, were nomadic; his father suffered from tuberculosis, and the family traveled from one sanatorium to another. At the age of 16, Kieslowski entered Fireman’s Training College. His stay was short-lived, instilling a lifelong loathing of uniforms and disciplines. To avoid military service he returned to school, later attending the Warsaw College for Theatre Technicians. In 1965, after several previous rejections, he was finally accepted into the famed Lodz Film School — the same institution which launched the careers of Roman Polanski, Andrzej Wadja, Jerzy Skolimowski, and Krzysztof Zanussi — and made his first short feature, Tramwaj (The Tram), the following year.

The communist-controlled Poland of the 1960s and 1970s was a nation of great political unrest. Consequently, film emerged as a crucial means… read more

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mark kaiser

12Jan10

Please, the title of this film is either "Trzy kolory: bialy" or "Threee Colors: White" or"Trois couleurs: Blanc", and the 'three colors'-thing IS important - WHY do you slaughter the title?  
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kirkgremlin

21Dec09

not my favorite of the trilogy, but any kieslowski is good kieslowski.  
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Vincent Bergeron

19Dec09

So original and rare in feelings that it is doomed not to be understood. As good as Blue ! Watching Red now...  

gino

30Aug09

I think the Storyline of Blanc was lacking something. I can't quite put my finger on it, but I was bored with some parts of the Film and found myself waiting for something that never came.  

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By Eduardo Zarate on February 22, 2009

I love Blanc – it’s the underrated gem in the Trilogy, easy to dismiss when compared to Bleu’s artistic intimacy or Rouge’s majestic characters. But doing a tragicomedy about revenge does not mean…  read review

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