All Critics (102) | Top Critics (29) | Fresh (94) | Rotten (8)
It's a powerful, disturbing film. May there be a day when such works seem less relevant.
Rage has no expiration date in Incendies, director Denis Villeneuve's gripping, era-jumping drama about a family melded to its war-torn past.
It is no surprise that it was nominated for a Best Foreign Language Film Oscar.
"Incendies" is occasionally compelling, but also overlong and vexing in the ways it draws out a "shocking" conclusion that we unravel long before the characters do.
If you think of Canadian films as the movie equivalent of cucumber sandwiches and chamomile tea, hold tight.
A mystery, a melodrama, a prison film, and a love story, "Incendies'' is foremost a scream of rage at a society destroyed by religion and by men.
Absorbing throughout, Incendies has the feel of a Greek tragedy until a conclusion that stretches credibility to breaking point.
The movie never feels long, partly because of Azabal's terrific performance.
It is not really believable, and yet if it is not taken literally, but as a cinematic prose-poem, it has undoubted force.
Incendies is in essence a family drama, astonishingly intense but impressively poised.
Elemental and expertly directed, Nawal's story haunts long after the credits have rolled.
A wholly cinematic drama that combines twists and suspense with harrowing political insight.
No-one's idea of an easy watch, but Incendies is an essential one, announcing Villeneuve as a major filmmaking talent and Azabal as an actress of remarkable versatility.
A strong film based on a weak story.
Expertly shifting between present and past , writer-director Denis Villeneuve displays an impressive command of his material, patiently building up to an emotionally explosive climax.
As the horrors become clear, as rape and torture and death draw us deeper into the abyss, Incendies hopes to help us see clearly. It doesn't always succeed.
The most intense film I've seen all year. It's also one of the most compelling -- and, in its own way, one of the most entertaining.
"Childhood is a knife stuck in your throat," a dead woman's will informs her twin children. "It can't be easily removed." The siblings will discover that knife is double-edged on an odyssey to discover their roots.
Incendies is a grueling, harrowing trek in search of identity. It is more an emotional experience than an intellectual exercise, more the heart than the head.
The movie plays out like a page-turning novel that you can't put down. There are a number of shocking revelations that take you completely by surprise. The acting is outstanding, especially the...
Instead of finding resonance between personal and political tragedy, the film only succeeds in cheapening both.
It would be difficult not to be swept away by the dramatic intensity of Incendies.
he film offers moments for comprehension and reflection, beautifully pacing itself right up until its stunning conclusion.
Imaginative and illuminating, demonstrating that children often have no idea about what went on in their parents' lives during the formative years before they were born.
More Critic ReviewsSource: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/incendies/
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