Who by Fire (French: Comme le feu) is a 2024 Canadian-French drama film written and directed by Philippe Lesage. The film starring Noah Parker and Aurelia Arandi-Longpré is about a film-loving teenager Jeff, who spends a vacation with his best friend Max's family in a remote log cabin.[1][2]
It was selected in the Generation 14plus section at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival, where it had its world premiere on 17 February[3] and won the Grand Prix of the International Jury of Generation.
Synopsis
Jeff, a 17-year-old boy, joins his best friend Max's family for a visit to a large and secluded mansion in the forest of Blake Cadieux, a director he looks up to, and he has a secret crush on Alyocha, his friend's older sister, so he has high expectations for the trip. He feels strong emotions during this trip where he also observes the sometimes harmful power relations among a group of adults. Cadieux, whom Jeff thought of as a possible mentor, does not turn out to be the role model he had hoped for.
It will go into commercial release on December 6, 2024.[14]
Reception
Andreas Köhnemann reviewing in Kino Zeit at Berlinale rated the film with three and half stars and appreciated the direction and cinematography stating, "Lesage and his cameraman Balthazar Lab skillfully capture the mixture of subliminal and abruptly emerging accusations and malice." Concluding Köhnemann wrote, "You don't need devils, slashers or death viruses to create the feeling of danger, emotions at the point of escalation are completely sufficient."[15]
For The Hollywood Reporter, Jordan Mintzer praised Lesage as an underrated director whose films should be garnering a lot more attention and acclaim. He praised the film's cast for their performances and analyzed the reference to Leonard Cohen's song "Who by Fire" in the film's English-language title, writing that "it’s an apt description of the many baptisms the characters go through in the movie, battling the elements and one another. If certain adults barely make it out alive and all of them are unlikely, in any case, to change much, the kids emerge more mature from their experiences, licking their wounds and ready to face what comes next. They’re both the real victims in Who by Fire and the only ones who leave us with hope."[16]