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Incendies (2010)

Director: Denis Villeneuve

Time Out rating

Average user rating
4 reviews

Movie review

From Time Out London

Pain, suffering, humiliation, bloodshed, martyrdom, misogyny, corruption, political instability, family secrets and death: the Oscar-nominated ‘Incendies’ by Québécois director Denis Villeneuve, based on a play by Wajdi Mouawad, is not what you’d call a laugh riot. A smouldering exploration of family ties and how the hardships of the recently deceased can have a damaging psychological effect on those left behind, it’s framed as a hokey mystery, set up via a cryptic last will and testament left by a mother (Lubna Azabal) to her son (Maxim Gaudette) and daughter (Mélissa Désormeaux-Poulin). She insists her kids travel from Montreal to the Middle East and uncover the identities of an estranged brother and father. That she wasn’t able to muster the strength to disclose these details during her lifetime offers an eloquent window on her past agonies.

Having created a film reminiscent of the sand-blasted misery workouts of Alejandro González Iñárritu (specifically ‘Babel’), Villeneuve appears to believe that narrative contrivance can and should be overlooked if the emotional pay-off is hefty enough. In fact, where there should be tears there’s a void simply because events become more far-fetched the further this twisty tale unfurls. The less said about what the kids find on their journey the better, because, as tough as the story is to swallow, Villeneuve at least builds his film with a measure of understated style. But while the characters lack credibility, the social backdrop and texture of the performances certainly don’t, and Villeneuve manages to say more about the sorry state of the Middle East (Lebanon is suggested but never mentioned) through the bold, crisp way he shoots faces, buildings and parched, beige-brown landscapes. So let’s call it’s a strong film based on a weak story.

Author: David Jenkins

Time Out London Issue 2131: 22 – 28 June, 2011


User reviews of this film

  • Robert Thornton said...
    Posted on Jul 14 2011 08:20 This should have been a good film but sadly the rather silly finale to the story let the long build up down. A shame, as the acting and sets were very convincing.
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  • cinephile said...
    Posted on Jun 26 2011 20:16 Way above any film I've seen this year. Powerful!. Cinema at its best, simple.
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  • Lisa said...
    Posted on Jun 22 2011 15:46 This is my favourite film of the year so far! I can't stop thinking about it since I watched it at the Q&A. It's a bit of a mystery and keeps your attention as the story unfolds. Beautiful and harrowing, there's a lesson about the consquences of war that shouldn't be over looked and the importance of family is never be underestimated. Go watch it!!!
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  • an Ross said...
    Posted on Jun 22 2011 08:14 lovely
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Cast & crew

Director: Denis Villeneuve

Cast: Rémy Girard, Allen Altman, Lubna Azabal, Maxim Gaudette, Mélissa Désormeaux-Poulin

Genre(s): War, Drama

Rated: 15

Duration: 131 mins

UK Release: Jun 24 2011




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