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On Location Three Colors: Red Three Colours: Red Revisiting Trois Couleurs: Rouge a Tribute to Krzysztof Kielowski
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Preamble The third and final film of Kieslowskis Three Colours trilogy, Red (Trois Couleurs: Rouge), is one of my favourite films of all time. The entire trilogy, and especially Red, has affected me profoundly in multiple ways: visualising and shaping my aesthetic preferences [crude example: it's at the back of my mind when taking photographs of urban landscapes; subtler example: it gives us food for thought, if not a manual, for a European identity and our cultural language], as well as capturing and expressing questions for which Ive always had an instinctive fascination. The overall metaphor or brief of the trilogy was to apply the three core values of the French revolution and building blocks of European enlightenment (Freedom Blue, Equality White, Fraternity or Brotherhood Red) to contemporary Europe (France, Poland and Switzerland respectively). Social alienation and altruism; technological dependence and voyeurism; the hope, energy and dreams of youth versus the regrets, fatigue and pessimism of old age; and, above all, love and forgiveness.
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One of the fascinating things about watching the Three Colours trilogy again and again is the amount of new layers, symbolisms and possible readings that one can extract from these cinematic texts, which I feel will endure for a very long time to come. I was lucky enough to grow up in a city (Athens) which has persistently promoted and distributed quality European films. Watching Blue and Red at the time of their original release back in 1993 and 1995 [I admit not watching White until much later] was also a formative experience in filmgoing terms, by making me fall in love with a type of European cinema, which some call art house I call it cinema that respects both itself and the viewer; films that challenge you, but also comfort you by providing you with the aesthetic vocabulary, ideals or values that our contemporary society so desperately lacks. For some reason Ive never really enjoyed (literary) poetry (it just doesnt do it for me or perhaps I dont get it), but perhaps surprisingly, I love the cinematic poetry of Kieslowski or, for example, Angelopoulos perhaps because I can relate to it in various historical or cultural ways.
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Carouge
A lot has been written by film critics, scholars, students and fans about Kieslowskis work and about Red in particular [check out the reading list below for some recommendations]. However, Kieslowski firmly believed in the role of the audience considering the viewer as a partner in the process of realisation. One gets the sense that he was driven by a subtle but persistent passion and also by a clear and pressing vision, which he materialised through painstaking attention to detail throughout the film-making process. Still, he refused to lead viewers to a specific interpetation of specific stylistic choices or narrative techniques. ["I don't believe in cinema, I only believe in the audience" Kieslowski at an interview he gave during the 1994 Cannes Film Festival].
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This online exhibition is both a labour of love and a dream come true, as its something Ive wanted to do for many years. For this photo-essay I tracked and captured some of the main filming locations of Trois Couleurs: Rouge in Geneva, as identified through research and repeated viewings of the film and of the DVD extras (which I strongly recommend for all fans of the film and of Kieslowskis work). I present locations in the order in which they first appear in the film. This exhibition would not have been possible without the help of Alexandre Fabbri, whose excellent website, Kieslowskis World, is by far the best and most comprehensive online resource on Kieslowskis films. It goes without saying that any errors or omissions are entirely my own, and this photoessay is by no means exhaustive of the actual filming locations.
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1. Valentines Flat, Augustes Flat and Caf Chez Joseph (corner of Rue des Sources and Rue Micheli du Crest)
The corner of Rue des Sources and Rue Micheli-du-Crest (w hich, for some reason, on Google Maps appears as Rue GabriellePerret-Gentil). This is the precise spot w here Caf Chez Joseph and, above it, Valentines flat w ere located. That old building has now been replaced by a new block of flats.
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Rue Micheli-du-Crest and (in the background on the right, at the junction w ith Rue des Sources) the intact building w hich housed Augustes flat, directly opposite Valentines flat and Caf Chez Joseph).
On Red, we had an enormous problem. We needed a set which had in it both Irne Jacobs flat and the flat of the young man who lived opposite. Using a very complicated camera on a crane, which was very rarely used in France or in Europe at the time, we had to be able to follow each of them walking around and returning to Irne Jacobs flat. We found the ideal spot so we wouldnt need a studio reconstruction. [...] In that way we managed to achieve a studio-type set in the middle of Geneva. It should have been built in a studio but it wouldnt have been so good. The link with reality meant it was good in the streets, the natural light was good, having the real set was good. Having this set gave [Kieslowski] some ideas, so economy had to be sacrificed so that this set could be used. But it was good for the film. [Marin Karmitz, producer of Trois Couleurs: Rouge, in the DVD extras].
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The opposite corner of Rue des Sources and Rue Micheli-du-Crest facing both Valentines flat on one side and Augustes flat on the other. That building hasnt changed at all and appears throughout the film (easily recognisable by its red blinds) as Auguste usually parks his red Jeep just outside.
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The shop at the (opposite) corner of Rue des Sources and Rue Micheli-du-Crest, w hich w as facing Caf Chez Joseph and appears at several points in the film (including the scene in w hich Auguste drives over the curb in order to do a quick U-turn). That side of the corner hasnt changed much.
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The (renovated) Restaurant des Philosophes at Rue Prvost-Martin. The restaurant is next to the building of Valentines flat / Caf Chez Joseph in Rue des Sources, and features at several points in the film, e.g. w hen Valentine enters or exists Caf Chez Joseph. The old building of the restaurant has disappeared as has the large sign but Les Philosophes is still situated there in a slick new building w ith a new logo.
2. Valentine after the (first) Fashion Show, in the car, drives by the river at the Quai des Bergues (?)
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3. Valentine drives by the Place des Casemates while Auguste drops his books
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The corner of Place des Casemates and Boulevard Emile-Jaques-Dalcroze, w hich is one focal locations of the film (only a few blocks aw ay from Valentines flat). Valentine w aits at the red light here and then drives off w hile Auguste drops his law books.
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As Valentine drives aw ay w e see on the w all (right) the scaffolding for the huge poster that is placed there later in the film.
For me Red was a completely overwhelming experience, because I filmed it in Geneva, where Id grown up. Id left Geneva at about 18, with no desire to return, and returning with this film overwhelmed me. Being able to come back and revisit something, but this time with a film that I loved, doing work that I loved, that was really amazing [Irne Jacob talks about Red - in the DVD extras, 2001]. 4. Retired judge Joseph Kerns house at 6 Chemin Fillion in Carouge
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Chemin Fillion in Carouge the street in w hich the judge (Jean-Louis Trintingant) lives, and spies.
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Its a meeting between experience, disappointed experience, and the beginning of life, with all its hopes and possibilities. There was some very strong dialogue and Krzysztof himself felt very close to it. He wanted to express it through these different characters. It revisited a time when everything is possible, when you dont know what you want out of life. Afterwards comes disappointed experience, the place you finally end up. [Irne Jacob, ibid.].
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6 Chemin Fillion in Carouge w here judge Joseph Kern lives. The house situated there today looks and feels quite different from that featuring in the film and its likely that some building w ork has taken place since 1993.
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5. Rita the judges dog runs away from Valentine at the Promenade du Pin
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Promenade du Pin.
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Promenade du Pin, w hich incidentally looks over Boulevard Emile-Jaques-Dalcroze and the Place des Casemates. This is the exact spot in w hich the huge poster of Valentine goes up and dow n later in the film.
6. Rita hides in the church of Saint Francois de Sales (23 Rue des Voisins):
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23 Rue des Voisins and the beautiful church of Saint Francois de Sales in the background.
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I would like to say more about this scene. It looks so easy but it was quite difficult. In Red, particularly, we wanted the viewer to think backwards, to make associations with things he had already seen without noticing. For example, we keep the picture of the dog going into the church for quite a long time so the viewer remembers he has already seen it. A few minutes before, the heroine was in the same place, drinking mineral water, tired from doing her training. The same place. Of course its not important; its just one of many shots. But we tried to build up these signs, particularly in Red, so the viewer would realise that what he sees here, he has already seen, and would register that in some part of his subconscious. Many of the signs will not get through to him, but we let them build up so that at least some do, so that he understands the principle [Krzysztof Kielowski 1994 masterclass, DVD extras].
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Inside Eglise Saint Francois de Sales. Valentine goes inside to search for the dog, briefly interrupting the service.
This scene is also interesting because it shows us the character of Valentine. She interrupts mass, but it embarrasses her to interrupt something that might mean something to someone. [Krzysztof Kielowski, ibid.] 7. Valentine drives by Lac Lman (Lake Geneva) at the Quai de Cologny and turns right to Chemin Byron, continuing uphill
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If you look at Valentines life, nothing important is happening, but whoever is telling the story can take pleasure in penetrating into these peoples lives so you discover something new. Youre intruding. Theres something voyeuristic about it. You hear Valentine talk to her lover. The judge listens to his neighbours conversations. So you feel a bit voyeuristic. [Irne Jacob, ibid.]. 9. Universit de Genve (University of Geneva)
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Valentine is a student at the University of Geneva. (Judging by the handrail, the steps, the shape of the w ooden doors and the surrounding pavement, Im almost certain that) Auguste celebrates passing his law exam at the steps of the main entrance of Uni Bastions, Rue De-Candolle.
Its an age when you talk about what youre doing. You do things but you dont really believe in them. [Irne Jacob, ibid.]. 10. The judge faces the residents of Pinchat (south-east Carouge) at the Palais de Justice (Place du Bourg-de-Four)
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Valentine: If I had to go to courtare there still judges like you? The Judge: You wont go to court. Justice doesnt deal with the innocent. 11. Auguste ties his dog at the Quai de Cologny by Lac Lman (Lake Geneva):
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Quai Gustave-Ador at Lac Lman, and at the background (far left) Quai de Cologny
There was the idea, with the film Red being on the theme of brotherhood, that you might help someone or play an important part in someones life without knowing about it. [...] Its brotherhood in spite of ones self. [Irne Jacob, ibid.]. 12. The judge stares at Valentines poster before turning right at the Place des Casemates
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The corner of Place des Casemates and Boulevard Emile-Jaques-Dalcroze identically the same after 18 years.
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The side entrance to the Grand Thtre de Genve, Boulevard du Thtre. This is the exact spot at w hich the judge parks his Mercedes before attending Valentines fashion show .
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The Grand Thtre de Genve w here the Fashion Show takes place. After the show , the judge talks to Valentine about his past about fate and guilt.
The Judge: Deciding what is true and what isnt now seems to mea lack of modesty. Valentine: Vanity? The Judge: Vanity.
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Grand Thtre de Genve, Boulevard du Thtre. Judge Kern gives Valentine a bottle of pear brandy and checks her ferry tickets as she is about to travel to England to see her boyfriend. They greet and he drives aw ay. She notices an old lady trying to push a bottle into a recycling bin (a recurring scene in all three films of the Trilogy) and helps her.
The Judge: Leave. Its your destiny. You cant live your brothers life for him. Valentine: I love him. If only I could help. The Judge: You can. Be. Valentine: What do you mean? The Judge: Thats all: be. Its a film where things are possible. Its possible to meet each other, to help each other. Its not voluntarist. In life things are more subtle, more complicated. And its quite a hard film. [...] In life you juggle so much and then what do you do with it all, without being completely pessimistic like the judge? Theres no answer for that. Something happens. Its in spite of us, in the end You can do anything you want, but if you dont have love, its pointless. And you can try to help everyone, but if youre not there, its pointless. [Irne Jacob, ibid.].
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Recommended Reading: D. Stok (1994), Kieslowsk i on Kieslowsk i, Faber & Faber G. Andrew (1998), The Three Colours Trilogy, BFI S. Zizek (2001), The Fright of Real Tears: Krzystof Kieslowsk i Between Theory and Post-Theory, BFI
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A. Insdorf (2002), Double Lives, Second Chances, Miramax Books M. Haltof (2004), The Cinema of Krzysztof Kieslowsk i: Variations on Destiny and Chance, Columbia University Press J. Kickasola (2004), Films of Krzystof Kieslowsk i, Continuum Recommended Listening: Z. Preisner (1994), Trois Couleurs: Rouge, Virgin Records Z. Preisner (1998), Requiem for my Friend, Erato Recommended Links: Kieslowskis World
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Really amazed with all the hard work youve put into this one. Well done and keep them coming!
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Ana says:
February 4, 2012 at 12:02 pm
Thank you for this amazing work. I love Kieslowski. Greetings from Argentina.
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rgerodimos says:
February 4, 2012 at 7:39 pm
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