Monday, March 28, 2011

Which Prosumer Camcorder

Fire (2010)

been more than 24 hours since I saw Incendies , the fourth film by French director Denis Villeneuve and still some plans refuse to leave my head. Who could forget the opening sequence to the rhythm of You and Whose Army of Radiohead, that understanding is achieved only at the end of the play? And how to leave behind such utter helplessness that the spectator has to penetrate the mysteries of that is undoubtedly one of the best dramas of last year? The answer is simple, you can not.

The exploration of the political status of a nonexistent country of the Middle East, with strong similarities to Lebanon, allows Villeneuve freely raise their ideological positions and spin this story completely miserable, that exposes how little the stark power of blood ties, generated and conclude in love but whose ordeal through can be unbearable.

Telling Incendies is through the eyes of a woman desperate to find the son he had with the love of his life in a bloody civil war, as well as through the eyes of two sons, who died after his mother discovered his father is still alive and have a brother lost in a remote country. The will of the woman, who one day it just stops talking and later died, required her two children to find the lost father and brother, to deliver a mysterious envelope and thus secure the repose of his mother.

is with this motivation that Mélissa Desormeaux-Poulin, who interpreted flawlessly to the daughter of the protagonist, travels to the troubled country to trace the history of his mother, only to discover with each step the true identity of a woman who is completely unaware of, finding a string of horrors and twists worthy of more gritty Korean cinema.

Incendies is a film that should be without knowing anything more than what little I had, since its crushing effect depends largely on the ignorance of the perfect outcome, however, this is no time film that relies solely on its shock factor unexpected, since all the footage is an undeniable shows both the mastery of Villeneuve in the direction, as his photographer André Turpin.

The course of history is aimed at creating great moments of action due to its extremely dramatic approach, not But each of the characters takes this to a level of expressiveness really memorable scenes giving us entirely able to shrug the heart, blood helarnos with probably the most heart-rending cry I've ever heard in my life and lead to tears catharsis worthy of any work by Sophocles.

To make matters worse the film is set to a soundtrack truly outstanding, combining some songs of Amnesiac Radiohead with original music by Grégoire Hetzel, so the show ends up being a complete marvel.

Nominated for an Oscar for best Foreign Film award that inexplicably lost Incendies is another example of the high level of Canadian cinema and a treaty that many may associate with the horrors of war, but despite its grim history is simply a treatise on love .


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