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Session Three
October 14 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
We’ll be discussing:
️ Before Midnight (2013)
Theme: Time, Marriage, and Erosion of Idealism
- Explores how love evolves over decades, especially within long-term partnership.
- Focuses on communication breakdown, resentment, and emotional labor.
- Examines the tension between romantic idealism and real-world responsibilities (parenting, aging, regret).
- Set in real time; argument scenes feel authentic and unresolved.
Contrast:
- Unlike the others, it shows a mature relationship under stress, not one forming or falling apart.
- No romantic arc—just the aftermath of years of love and compromise.
Blue Valentine (2010)
Theme: The Fragility of Passion and the Illusion of Rescue
- Cross-cuts between the euphoric beginnings of love and its disintegration.
- Explores how initial chemistry can’t save a relationship without growth.
- Highlights emotional stasis, gender roles, and unhealed wounds.
- Raw and emotionally intimate—love doesn’t always conquer all.
Contrast:
- More emotionally intense and volatile than Before Midnight.
- Whereas Crossing Delancey leans on warmth, this leans on emotional deterioration.
Crossing Delancey (1988)
Theme: Tradition vs. Independence in Modern Romance
- Centers on a single woman choosing between romantic fantasy and grounded partnership.
- Juxtaposes Old World values (matchmaking, family roots) with contemporary self-reliance.
- Explores how love can be found in unexpected, modest, enduring forms.
- Emphasizes kindness, emotional availability, and seeing someone clearly.
Contrast:
- The most hopeful and gentle of the three.
- Doesn’t dwell on disillusionment, but on choosing sincerity over fantasy.
- Opposes Blue Valentine‘s pain and Before Midnight’s weary realism with quiet optimism.
Quick Summary Table
| Film | Theme(s) | Tone |
|---|---|---|
| Before Midnight | Long-term love, emotional fatigue, real-world stakes | Reflective, tense |
| Blue Valentine | Romantic decline, emotional wounds, disillusionment | Raw, painful |
| Crossing Delancey | Tradition vs modernity, emotional clarity | Warm, hopeful |
Let me know if you’d like quotes, scene suggestions, or discussion questions for each film.