1hr 38mins / Drama / France
It's hard to think too many foreign filmmakers who've managed to exert a strong influence on the mindset of Western movie-goers. Kar Wai? Possibly. Herzog? Potentially. Haneke? Likely. But then there's Krystof Kieslowski who for a time in the early 90s became the go-to man for arthouse cinema. While he found most of his fame working outside his native Poland, he never stopped carrying the ethos he established while working on documentaries in his homeland. The Three Colours Trilogy represents his most recognised effort but I personally find it easier to be enamoured by the film that preceded directly proceeded it, the dreamy and emotive The Double Life of Veronique.
In his time, Kieslowski espoused a talent for portraying the inner-sense of his characters and in The Double Life of Veronique he provides this with a wistful search for identity through the main characters, Veronique and Weronika. The story is difficult to pinpoint exactly but it concerns them and unseen link which leads to a sense of unknown loss once tragedy strikes. While Kies famously denied the point was to dwell on metaphors, it never stops us from trying to do so and the film is both poetic and challenging. In the end, we're left with a visual poem; a film that evinces a mirrored image of beauty and tragedy with elusive editing and dream-like cinematography.
Why You Should Watch It
Because even in spite of the fragmented narrative it's a fantastic character piece which outlines the way film can naturally illustrate the unknowable qualities of life. Also, it's sort of like a much better version of Amelie.
Don't Listen To Us!
"The Double Life of Veronique is a much harder film to grasp than the Three Colors trilogy or Heaven, all of which are more plot-heavy and accessible. In Double Life, there is great dependence on precise images to make a point — little nuances of facial expressions, the warm and moody lighting. Kieslowski is very careful about composition and editing." - Tao Yue
"All this warping, shifting, reflecting, and hiding makes The Double Life Of Veronique feel more abstract than solid. Kieslowski tells the story from impressionistic angles that become dizzying, because they veer so often from painfully intimate to deliberately distancing. When he makes his audience squint through lace or stare into firelight-colored flares to see his protagonists, he puts them at a remove that feels odd, coming juxtaposed with scenes where the camera crawls into bed with those protagonists at particularly intimate moments. Again and again, he makes a point of giving viewers off-kilter views of the world" - Tasha Robinson (The Dissolve)
Did You Know?
Kieslowski originally wanted Andie MacDowell to play Veronique. Like that would have worked.
Available On
Blu-Ray and DVD [US] [UK]
Available On
Blu-Ray and DVD [US] [UK]
You Might Also Like
Persona (1966)
Upstream Colour (2013)
Paris Texas (1984)

