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Fire Will Come(O que arde)

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Spain, France, Luxembourg · 2019
1h 25m
Director Oliver Laxe
Starring Arias Amador, Benedicta Sanchez, Inazio Abrao, Elena Mar Fernández
Genre Drama

Shot in the north of Spain, this quiet, elemental character study tells the story of an arsonist who returns home to his remote village in the mountains after serving a prison sentence. Life goes on, until one night a sudden fire flares up and devastates the region.

Stream Fire Will Come

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

67

IndieWire by David Ehrlich

Rugged, elemental, and restrained to a degree that suggests its director finds poetry in even the simplest things (his camera lingers on rolling fog or the face of a farm animal with a reverence that might prove trying for those not on his wavelength), “Fire Will Come” is a slight but evocative meditation on making peace with something that isn’t possible to understand nor extinguish.

75

Slant Magazine by Diego Semerene

The film is much more in synchrony with the haziness of its imagery when it preserves the awkwardness between characters, the impossibility for anything other than life’s basic staples to be exchanged.

70

Variety by Guy Lodge

You know exactly what climax is coming in Oliver Laxe’s rustically beautiful rural parable, but its dreamy, mesmeric power lies in the waiting.

67

The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky

Quiet, slow-moving, ambiguous character studies might be a dime a dozen on the festival circuit, but there are few that remind us that there are things out there that still feel as big as myth.

60

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

I find myself admiring his visual and compositional sense, while being a bit exasperated by the provisional and coyly non-committal nature of his storytelling.

50

RogerEbert.com by Simon Abrams

That opening scene is also, in retrospect, somewhat depressing for the way that it conflates a glib fatalism with an unbelievable sort of turn-the-other-cheek optimism ("If they hurt others, it's because they hurt, too,” as Benedicta says in one scene).

80

The Observer (UK) by Simran Hans

Laxe has a masterly command of rhythm and pacing. The action feels unhurried, despite the film’s tight running time, and there is a spaciousness to the world-building; attentive sound design and 16mm photography capture Galicia’s damp, green allure.

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