This may’ve been my favorite of the three “Trilogy” films, but perhaps this is because it is the one I saw third. By now all of the shifts in perspective and shared moments in time are flying at you a mile a minute — but it would be this way regardless of the order in which you see them. The director himself says there is no preferred order. Belvaux’s “Trilogy” is definitely a unique experiment in post-modern story telling, spinning three great yarns that fit together at axles, yet each film making sense on its own plus (and this is the wild part) in three different genres. Part one is action, part two is screwball comedy, part three as tragedy/melodrama. A very odd and uniquely presented junkie story is what part three, basically, is all about. Well worth the effort, but if I had to do it all over again I might watch part one last — the ending of that one would really pack even more of a punch if it was the end of all three films.