Your Account   Help   |   Your Basket: Empty   Checkout

 

Coming Soon      Bestsellers      Recommended      Special Offers      MovieMail Latest

MovieMailMovieMail HomeSingin
Home > Contemporary Film > Gay & Lesbian > Blue (Jarman) / Glitterbug

Recommended Blue (Jarman) / Glitterbug

Derek Jarman, 1993

Star Review

Derek Jarman was going blind and dying of AIDS-related illness when he made Blue. Against a screen solely of saturated blue he reflects – poignantly, humorously, sardonically – on friends, his condition, his life, on colour, death and “blind fate” in an intensely personal work that takes you to the heart of his frustration, his rage and his love. Simon Fisher Turner's soundtrack acts as a sympathetic counterpoint to his words.

Why blue? The answer partly comes through Jarman’s words. “Blue transcends the solemn geography of human limits,” he says. How fitting that a man who spent his own life transgressing and transcending petty limits should, with this final film – as with his garden created on the unpromising environment of a shingle beach at Dungeness – turn adversity into something sublime that says much about an unquenchable spirit of creativity.

“For blue there are no boundaries or solutions” he says.

The colour itself is invigorating, an electric presence – not far from International Klein Blue in fact; it makes the descriptions of terror and loneliness in Jarman’s words temporary and bearable, likewise his caustic comments born of desperation; the colour is beyond the intensity of the deepest blue sky. It becomes a focus for concentration and meditation on his words. It also puts us in Jarman’s mind, and we get close to not-seeing through his eyes – a sensation reinforced by the occasional flecks of damage to the blue print, which resemble the white flashes and black floaters that Jarman talks of in his eyes. On this blue space, Jarman conjures intimate visions. He talks of his sleep being broken by a lover: “Your kiss flares/A match struck in the night,” and all of our senses know exactly the sensation of which he speaks.

“Our time is the passing of a shadow”

In Blue, we listen to the words of a man coming to terms with sightlessness and the brief span of a human life. As his sight closes in, his mind is bright as a button, his body is falling apart, and his skin, he says, is “sitting on him like a bed of nettles”. No wonder then the moments of frustration and black humour, as when he reads the immensely long list of side effects of his medication, or says, “The Gautama Buddha instructs me to walk away from illness. But he wasn’t attached to a drip.” These moments pass however, and the need to affirm love in the present, in the here and now, assumes precedence. This is a film that makes you reach for a loved one and hold them very close.

“Kiss me. On the lips, on the eyes,” he says. “Kiss me again. And again. Never enough,” he says.

Also included on the DVD is a first release of Glitterbug, made for BBC2's Arena programme and broadcast shortly after Jarman’s death. A collage of his Super 8 footage from the 1970s and 80s, and set to a specially-recorded soundtrack from Brian Eno, it is a deluge of images, showing hundreds, thousands, of snapshots of people with whom he shared his life. With footage from home and on the streets, from gigs and fashion shows, backstage and on set, and from flats, gardens and mazes, it is the perfect accompaniment to the minimal richness of Blue.

Graeme Hobbs on 13th June 2007

View all 230 of Graeme Hobbs’s reviews

[ Show Film Description ]

Reviews

Share your thoughts - write a review

By Edmund Hardy on 1st August 2001

Jarman in his last years, losing his sight through HIV and AIDS, found that images were no longer meaningful to him, and so for this film he abandons them and instead ... more >

 

Related Genres

£16.99

RRP: £19.99
Save £3.00 (15%)
Free Delivery on UK Orders!

Availability
This product should be despatched within 3-4 working days. Delivery times

Ratings for this DVD

Average Rating

5/5

Log in to place your vote!

DVD Extras
  • Bonus film: Glitterbug (Jarman, 1994) with music by Brian Eno.
Film Details

Director

Derek Jarman

Year

1993

Country

UK

Cast

Tilda Swinton (Voice), Derek Jarman (Voice), Nigel Terry (Voice)

Technical Details

Certificate

15

Length

75 mins

Label

ART-E

Format

DVD Colour

Region

2

Aspect

Anamorphic widescreen

Cat No

ART082DVD

Main Language

ENGLISH

Customers who liked this also liked...

1986, Derek Jarman, DVD

 

£15.99

RRP: £19.99
Save £4.00

Recommended Caravaggio

One of Jarman's most accessible works, Caravaggio is a ravishingly shot depiction of the painter's life as he...

More Details

 

MovieMail Latest

 

 

 

Monthly Film Catalogue

December Mini Film Catalogue The Digital Edition of our December Mini Film Catalogue is out now!

 

 

Films by Derek Jarman

 

Films starring Tilda Swinton (Voice)

 

 

 

 

 RSS Feeds | MovieMail Podcasts | December Mini Film Catalogue | Subscribe to our email newsletter!

Browse our Film catalogue: DVDs by Genre | DVDs by Country | DVDs by Director | DVDs by Actor

New Releases | Bestsellers | Recommended | Special Offers | MovieMail Latest

 

 

MovieMail use a Thawte certificate to ensure secure transmission of your information. Click here for for information HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.

 

 

For questions or assistance email us at info@moviemail-online.co.uk or call us on 0844 776 0900 (UK residents) / +44 208 099 7084 (International)

© 1996-2008 MovieMail Ltd., All Rights Reserved. Find out more about MovieMail