(1986)1986 - Betty Blue

The haunting, saxophone-heavy soundtrack provides the emotional pulse of the film, shifting seamlessly from breezy and lighthearted to somber and melancholic.

Jean-Jacques Beineix’s is less a movie and more a fever dream of primary colors, Mediterranean heat, and a love that consumes everything it touches. It begins as a sun-drenched erotic romance and spiraling slowly into a devastating psychological tragedy. Betty Blue (1986)1986

Betty Blue is a visceral experience. While the Director’s Cut (running over three hours) provides more depth to Zorg and Betty’s domestic life, the original theatrical version is a tighter, more poetic punch to the gut. It is a beautiful, messy, and ultimately tragic exploration of the thin line between passion and insanity. Rating: 4.5/5 Betty Blue is a visceral experience

Béatrice Dalle is a force of nature. In her debut role, she balances vulnerability and volatility so perfectly that you cannot look away, even as her character becomes increasingly self-destructive. Rating: 4