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Fire at Sea

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6.9/10
IMDb

Directed by
  
Gianfranco Rosi

Music by
  
Stefano Grosso

Edited by
  
Jacopo Quadri

Director
  
Gianfranco Rosi



Written by
  
Gianfranco Rosi

Cinematography
  
Gianfranco Rosi

Initial release
  
18 February 2016 (Italy)

Distributor
  
01 Distribution

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Produced by
  
Gianfranco Rosi Paolo Del Brocco Donatella Palermo

Nominations
  
Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature

Cast
  
Pietro Bartolo, Samuele Pucillo, Samuele Caruana

Awards
  
European Film Academy Documentary Award - Prix Arte

Similar
  
Rauf, Hep Yek, Sacro GRA, Anthropoid, American Honey

Fire at sea official trailer 1 2016 documentary


Fire at Sea (Italian: Fuocoammare) is a 2016 Italian documentary film directed by Gianfranco Rosi. It won the Golden Bear at the 66th Berlin International Film Festival. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature at the 89th Academy Awards. It was also selected as the Italian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the awards but it was not nominated.

Contents

Fire at sea 2016 trailer


Overview

The film was shot on the Sicilian island of Lampedusa during the European migrant crisis, and sets the migrants' dangerous Mediterranean crossing against a background of the ordinary life of the islanders. The main characters are a twelve-year-old boy from a local fishing family and a doctor who treats the migrants on their arrival. In his acceptance speech for the Golden Bear award, Rosi stated that his intention was to heighten awareness of the migrant situation, saying, "It's not acceptable that people die crossing the sea to escape from tragedies."

Reception

The film has a 92% rating from Rotten Tomatoes and a rating of 87 out of 100 from Metacritic.

Meryl Streep, chair of the Berlin jury, called the film "a daring hybrid of captured footage and deliberate storytelling that allows us to consider what documentary can do. It is urgent, imaginative and necessary filmmaking." Andrew Pulver, writing for The Guardian, described the documentary as having "a distinctive, humane cinematic style" and being "a collection of tiny details that morph, almost by osmosis, into a shocking excavation of the mechanics of crisis." He praises it for approaching the tragedy indirectly, via the people of Lampedusa. The film was also appreciated by the Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, who stated that he would carry with him 27 DVDs of the film to a session of the European Council. Each one of the copies was given to a head of state or government of the European Union.

The Economist had issue with the relative lack of relation between the refugee crisis and the impact it had on the lives of the islanders interviewed.

References

Fire at Sea Wikipedia