In Flames | Telescope Film
In Flames

In Flames

Critic Rating

(read reviews)

User Rating

After the death of the family patriarch, a mother and daughter’s precarious existence is ripped apart. They must find strength in each other if they are to survive the malevolent forces that threaten to engulf them.

Stream In Flames

What are critics saying?

83

IndieWire by Christian Zilko

It’s a seedy ride through a bleak existence that would be entertaining enough to watch with popcorn if it didn’t depict a life that’s all too real for too many people.

80

The New York Times by Alissa Wilkinson

Kahn manages to assemble the story in a way that escapes feeling like a series of object lessons.

80

The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Radheyan Simonpillai

When In Flames premiered at Cannes last year, I compared it with Ari Aster’s Hereditary, but suggested Kahn’s film has more heart and conviction. I stand by that.

80

Screen Rant by Patrice Witherspoon

A roaring achievement for the first-time feature director, In Flames is an intensely vivid tale of survival. Khan’s humanistic approach towards understanding marginalized women is hauntingly beautiful.

80

The Hollywood Reporter by Lovia Gyarkye

At its strongest, In Flames teases out how the patriarchy — a large, unruly force — fractures the relationship between mother and daughter.

80

Screen Daily by Allan Hunter

What lends this film distinction is the way it evolves into a story of female empowerment, and the bond between mother and daughter as they combat the pernicious evils of a patriarchal society.

80

The Irish Times by Tara Brady

The many textures and mysteries don’t always fit together. Indeed, the movie is better when it trades in real-world patriarchal controls and abuses rather than things that go bump in the night. But this remarkable debut feature will keep you hooked until the final reveal.

70

Collider by Tania Hussain

Thought-provoking and poignant, In Flames isn’t an easy conversation, but it is a necessary one that rests its narrative on the pervasive gaze of patriarchal oppression.

60

Time Out by Phil de Semlyen

As a supernatural chiller, In Flames finds itself undermined by its own everyday horrors.