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  2. Three Colours: Blue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Colours:_Blue

    Three Colours: Blue (French: Trois couleurs: Bleu, Polish: Trzy kolory: Niebieski) is a 1993 psychological drama film co-written and directed by Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski. It is the first instalment in the Three Colours trilogy , themed on the French Revolutionary ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity, followed by White and ...

  3. Blue (1993 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_(1993_film)

    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.

  4. Blue (1992 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_(1992_film)

    Blue is a Canadian short drama film, written and directed by Don McKellar and released in 1992. [1] An exploration of culture's ambivalent relationship with pornography , the film stars David Cronenberg as a carpet salesman with a passion for erotic literature , intercut with scenes of explicit sexuality.

  5. List of cinematic firsts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cinematic_firsts

    The first Kinetoscope film shown in public exhibition on May 9, 1893 and is the earliest known example of actors performing a role in a film. [4] The world's first film production studio, the Black Maria, or the Kinetographic Theater, was completed on the grounds of Edison's laboratories at West Orange, New Jersey, for the purpose of making ...

  6. Blue (1968 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_(1968_film)

    Blue is a 1968 American Western film directed by Silvio Narizzano and starring Terence Stamp, Joanna Pettet, Karl Malden, Ricardo Montalbán, and Stathis Giallelis. The film was made in Panavision anamorphic and released by Paramount Pictures on May 10, 1968.

  7. Blue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue

    In the art and life of Europe during the early Middle Ages, blue played a minor role. This changed dramatically between 1130 and 1140 in Paris, when the Abbe Suger rebuilt the Saint Denis Basilica. Suger considered that light was the visible manifestation of the Holy Spirit. [71]

  8. Kinemacolor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kinemacolor

    Used commercially from 1909 to 1915, it was invented by George Albert Smith in 1906. [1] [2] It was a two-colour additive colour process, photographing a black-and-white film behind alternating red/orange and blue/green filters and projecting them through red and green filters. [3]

  9. History of film - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_film

    Griffith followed this up with the even bigger Intolerance (1916), but, due to the high quality of film produced in the US, the market for their films was high. [77] In France, film production shut down due to the general military mobilization of the country at the start of the war. Although film production began again in 1915, it was on a ...