Conceptual color development
'There's never been a colour movie I've freaked out over except one: this thing called Deep End' – David Lynch The film Deep End (1970) introduces us to the life of young Michael (John Moulder-Brown) just as he begins to work in the Newford public baths. There he meets his partner Susan (Jane Asher) to whom he feels attracted and will end up becoming obsessed with her rejection. The film is about dealing with sexuality and intimate relationships that took place in the Swinging London, between mid-60s and early 70s, due to the sexual revolution that happened with the introduction of the contraceptive pill in 1964. Taking advantage of the social context and the chromatic explosion of the time, Jerzy Skolimowski uses the screen as if it was a canvas. Through the use of color, he manages to define the characters and the interactions that take place between them, expressing ideas and concepts in a purely visual way.
All excerpts from Deep End BFI Blu-ray edition © 2011 British Film Institute. All rights reserved.
Spoiler Alert: Crucial plot points are revealed in the interest of the analysis.