Fire Will Come (O Que Arde) Kimstim Reviewed for Shockya.com & BigAppleReviews.net linked from Rotten Tomatoes by: Harvey Karten Director: Oliver Laxe Screenwriter: Santiago Fillol, Oliver Laxe Cast: Amador Arias, Benedicta Sánchez, Inazio Abrao, Elena Mar Fernández, David de Poso. A deserving prizewinner in Un Certain Regard at Cannes, Oliver Laxe's third feature studies nature and human nature with equal fascination. Viewers obsessive about spoiler alerts will be thwarted by the very title of "Fire Will Come": You know exactly what climax is.

MOVIES. 'Fire Will Come' ('O que arde'): Film Review As the English title implies, fire returns to the mountain, spooking the animals and forcing residents to evacuate their homes as firefighters and volunteers struggle to hold back the. Fire Will Come has the market cornered on the artistry, but for all its technical skill, it comes up short, both in length and in content.

Fire Will Come

The percentage of Approved Tomatometer Critics who have given this movie a positive review. Directed and co-written by French filmmaker Oliver Laxe alongside Santiago Fillol (who also wrote Mimosas with Laxe), Fire Will Come takes viewers to a picturesque, small rural community in Galicia. Mark Kermode and Simon Mayo review the week's essential streaming movies, including the new Hirokazu Koreeda film The Truth, J.-P. Valkeapää's drama Dogs Don't Wear Pants and Fire Will Come, a Galician-language film directed by Oliver Laxe which was screened in the Un Certain Regard. Oliver Laxe's Fire Will Come is a visually stunning, understated examination of the natural world which contextualizes the dissonance intrinsic to human nature through an understated formalism. The picturesque rural Galacia serves as the perfect setting for Laxe's exploration of man and nature, one.

Trailer Fire Will Come

Here, Fire Will Come loses its commitment to opacity and nuance, as Laxe juxtaposes Cohen's song to images of the landscape and close-ups of a cow, distancing himself from art cinema's froideur in favor of a kind of music-video sentimentality. The film is much more in synchrony with the haziness of its. In our Fire Will Come review, we take a look at a movie that is a slow burner about a literal raging inferno.

When Amador Coro gets out of prison for having provoked a fire, nobody is waiting for him. He returns to his home town, a small village hidden in the mountains of rural Galicia, to live with his elder mother, Benedicta, and three cows. Mark Kermode reviews Fire Will Come. An arsonist and a young firefighter find their destinies entwined in the depths of a forest fire.