Review of Incendies (2010) by Elijah B — 25 Sep 2011
Denis Villeneuve has adapted Wadji Mouawadâ(TM)s play into a powerful film combining family epoch, mystery, political commentary and psychological drama. It all begins rather goofily: in the reading of their motherâ(TM)s will twins Jeanne and Simon are tasked with a journey into the Middle East to find out about the secret life their mother Nawal led there before moving to Canada. Thatâ(TM)s where the goofiness ends. âIncendiesâ? does have the infinitely complex plot structure of the most exciting and challenging thriller, but within that compelling structure lies an intricate web of meaning.
The story alternates between different time levels, illuminating the twinâ(TM)s search as well as the hidden life of their mother. Villeneuve forces overwhelmingly devastating scenes on the viewer, taking his audience to the core of war in general and the conflict in Middle East in particular. This is definitely not a feel good flick; a lot of what I saw made me shake physically. Still, in the middle of all that hopelessness, all that human suffering and senselessness there are glimmers of hope. Few and far between as they might be they are still bright enough to prevail.
At 130 minute âIncendiesâ? doesnâ(TM)t contain one single wasted second. Itâ(TM)s tight, emotionally resonant, intellectually challenging and urgently relevant on countless levels. Itâ(TM)s not much of an exaggeration to state that this film is about everything in the sense that it covers the levels of individual experience, cultural processes, political workings and humanity in general. And it does it all exceptionally well. Iâ(TM)m still completely dumbfounded.
This review of Incendies (2010) was written by Elijah B on 25 Sep 2011.
Incendies has generally received very positive reviews.
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