Title Idea - BLUE NOTE
Title: Blue Note
The title Blue Note works on several levels - musical, emotional, and visual.
Musically: A blue note is a note that falls slightly off-pitch — not wrong, but intentionally imperfect. It’s what gives jazz its soul. That’s the tone of this film: controlled but human, elegant but unstable. The tension comes from what’s just beneath the surface, slightly out of tune.
Emotionally: The “blue” carries the film’s undercurrent of melancholy — the loneliness of suburbia, the quiet sadness that lingers even in violence. It’s not a loud story; it’s one that simmers, cool and precise.
Visually: The colour blue defines the film’s palette — night streets, the metallic gleam of knives and cars. It’s the visual language of calm before blood.
It is also a call to the song used in the opening act, What I'd say Pt. 1 &2 by Ray Charles, a prominent example of the use of a blue note.
In the end, Blue Note isn’t just about music — it’s about control, restraint, and the moment where something slips just slightly off-beat.


Comments
Post a Comment