Things We Lost In The Fire review

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Part way through Danish director Susanne Bier’s English-language follow-up to the Oscar-nommed After The Wedding, Halle Berry’s Audrey asks, “Do you ever feel like you’re inside a sad movie?” Not really – though we sure know when we’re watching one. Kicking off with a funeral, this downbeat portrait of grief, loss and drug dependency puts you through an emotional meat grinder, with only a slender sliver of feel-good to look forward to after almost two hours of guilt and recrimination.

Working from a script by Allan Loeb, Bier’s film revolves around two broken individuals struggling to rebuild their shattered lives. One, Berry’s character, is a widowed mother of two unable to deal with losing her husband Brian (David Duchovny) in a senseless act of violence. The other, Jerry Sunborne (Benicio Del Toro), is a junkie pal of Brian’s whose attendance at his burial initiates a testy relationship with Berry. It’s a pairing founded on their love for the deceased and her two children.

By helping Jerry kick his addiction, can Audrey finds a way of keeping her hubby’s spirit alive? Bier tries to make things more complex, but that’s essentially the story in a nutshell – complete with one of those touchy-feely endings they wouldn’t dare include in one of the Dogme-influenced dramas with which she made her name (Open Hearts, Brothers). Nor would the Duchovny character be quite the saint he’s depicted as in the movie’s rose-tinted flashbacks (he even dies as a have-a-go hero). These are the compromises you make when you try to dovetail your rigorous, in-your-face style with a mainstream Hollywood story. Oh well: at least Del Toro convinces, his raddled physiognomy and bleary peepers given no respite from DoP Tom Stern’s relentlessly intimate close-ups.

Berry's first stab at heavy drama since Monster's Ball is a worthy (read: slightly dreary) vehicle for the X-Men star. But when Benicio Del Toro is in the driving seat, it ticks most of the boxes you'd expect from a mainstream weepie.

The Total Film team are made up of the finest minds in all of film journalism. They are: Editor Jane Crowther, Deputy Editor Matt Maytum, Reviews Ed Matthew Leyland, News Editor Jordan Farley, and Online Editor Emily Murray. Expect exclusive news, reviews, features, and more from the team behind the smarter movie magazine. 

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