Names: Benjamin Moore True Pink 2003-40, Split Pea 2146-30, Passion Blue 2053-50, Spring Azalea 2077-40; Ralph Lauren Bold Orange IB63, Beach yellow IB71
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg is one of the most romantic movies about young love ever made. Each shot is an explosion of color in pop-art pastels--a color language that exaggerates the storybook quality of this romantic fantasy.
The film opens with an overhead crane shot of big round umbrellas moving about a street in the rain. But these are not your immigrant grandmother’s black umbrellas--they’re fun, pastel-colored umbrellas, and suggest that a whimsical narrative is about to unfold. Theses umbrellas are bright accents (just as our young lovers are) set against a rainy seaport. It’s from these opening colors that our production designers take their cues.
Look at the umbrella store itself in scene two, with its overstated chic luxury of fuchsia wallpaper and black lacquer. No one would dare have such a décor, or would they? The colors in our umbrella store suggest a shopping fantasia, devoid of the mundane drudgery of this world. And look at how she stands out against it: Catherine Deneuve, the face of France.
As we continue through the film, each scene plays out its poetry with colored rooms that underscore each character’s type. Genviève’s bedroom is blue—a storybook blue of exaggerated girlishness as she laments lost love. Guy lives with his aunt in an apartment painted sickly green, emphasizing her age, her lack of taste, her infirmity, and perhaps foreshadowing the fact that she will die.
The dark orange in the café and in Guy’s new girlfriend’s dress indicates a variation on dangerous red. Or let’s call this color “poppy” and I’ll suggest that we’re looking at a storybook version of intoxication through new love.
And when, alas, we come to the final scene, it is the one set rendered in neutrals—dead white against a frozen snowy background. The scene is of a chance meeting between old lovers after several years have passed. The flame of young love has flickered, color has fled us, and we weep for our heroes.
With this in mind, let’s create our own palette of pop-art pastels. Benjamin Moore’s Color Preview deck is especially helpful when choosing saturated colors. Plus here’s this week’s helpful tip: when planning a color design for an entire apartment, I like for the chips of all my final colors to look good together in my hand. I propose the following: Benjamin Moore True Pink 2003-40, Split Pea 2146-30, Passion Blue 2053-50, Spring Azalea 2077-40; Ralph Lauren Bold Orange IB63, Beach yellow IB71; all trim in Decorator’s White.
Special thanks to Benjamin Marcus for invaluable insights and clarifying perspective
- Mark Chamberlain, interior and decorative painter
Thank you. You've just given me another film to add to my Netflix queue!
view Kim in PDX's profile
my favorite movie!
view Julianna's profile
I went home and wrote a screenplay full of music and movement after I saw that movie (restored) at the film forum so many years ago. i listen to the soundtrack on my ipod. The talented, creative Jacques Demy wanted to make an American musical! Contrast that one with The Lives of Others - amazing, muted, almost colorless movie. (the filmmaker von Donnersmarck did his homework and learned that blue and red dyes were unavailable behind the iron curtain.)
view Chester's profile
Ooh lal la!
Next I hope you'll analyze "Les Desmoiselles du Rochefort" -- ( et pardonnez moi spelling!)
view Mid-C Frank's profile
I loved that movie, and I want to see it again now, too.
The music from it got boiled down to a little song in English "If it takes forever, I will wait for you" which Ken Berry sang to Debbie Reynolds in a little skit on his summer replacement variety show that ran for probably only a couple of weeks. It was cute, he was supposed to meet her and she kept not coming out of her house for their date; he ducks into the phone booth, and comes out ten years older each time, and then she comes out and they're both 110 years old, and she said she was putting on her makeup.
So, those are the words that come into my mind when I hear that music.
view Curtis's profile
Yes, Les Demoiselles de Rochefort -- less baroque but just as insane as far as color and design go. Every single outfit, pair of shoes, building -- in every frame -- is perfectly coordinated in Mod Mod blocks of color, even down to the pairing of our two stars -- Deneuve, the blond, and her real life sister Françoise Dorleac, a brunette (who died in a car crash shortly after filming finished) who wear identical outfits in coordinated sherbert colors.
So worth renting, but try to see it on the big screen too if you can.
view Margaret's profile
This was on IFC or Sundance on Saturday evening. It was a little off putting that every single line sung instead of pacing speech and song. Colors were heavenly though.
The guy who played Cassard was a ringer for the British designer Matthew Williamson.
view Lady J's profile
The blue loft in 'Diva'.
view hrhprincessfiona's profile