agmtw logo
search
Blaze (2022)

Blaze (2022)

A unique drama whose visual inventiveness does little to deepen its sensitive subject matter

5.3

Movie

Australia
English
Crime, Drama, Fantasy
2022
DEL KATHRYN BARTON, FEMALE DIRECTOR
Bernie Van Tiel, Heather Mitchell, John Waters
101 min

TLDR

Imagine dragons (literally).

What it's about

After witnessing the rape and murder of a woman, a young girl struggles to deal with her trauma with the help of an imaginary, papier-mâché dragon.

The take

You can tell that Blaze director Del Kathryn Barton is an award-winning visual artist first and foremost. The images that she puts together in this film are frequently stunning—making use of the camera in fascinating, freeing ways, and with lots of practical and computer-generated/animated effects that paint her young protagonist Blaze's world in glitter and feathers and lush colors. The imaginary dragon, which acts as a shorthand to symbolize Blaze's complex psychological response to her trauma, is a wonderfully tactile life-size puppet that lead actress Julia Savage responds to in an entirely convincing way.

But you can also tell that this is Barton's debut feature. Ultimately her visuals don't do enough to shake off or give meaning to the graphic scene of rape and murder that occurs at the beginning of the film. And the way she structures the movie threatens to make it feel like a series of music videos or video art pieces. Despite its originality and the level of commitment displayed by both Savage and Simon Baker, Blaze has difficulty communicating a coherent message about trauma—the film strung together by heavy-handed scenes that spell out various ideas and lead to the most obvious conclusions.

What stands out

Whether or not Blaze's style works for you, Barton's art really is worth checking out. Even here, it's undeniably thrilling to see an independent film take so much care in crafting a visual language for itself. And the dragon is still the best example of this. Looking more like a cross between a puppy, a seahorse, and a unicorn, its innocence and incongruity of parts are able to convey childlike wonder, confusion, and fear with ease. Just seeing the dragon puppet exhibited on its own somewhere would probably cut to the film's essence more than watching the actual movie would.

Comments

Add a comment

Your name

Your comment

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

UP NEXT 

More like this in

The Trial of the Chicago 7 (2020)

A star-studded and riveting legal drama with a blockbuster feel.

8.1

The Guilty (2018)

A minimalist, razor-sharp thriller that will have you gasping for air.

9.0

The Substance (2024)

Demi Moore swaps bodies in this standout chaotic body dysmorphia horror

8.0

System Crasher (2019)

A tale of trauma and one of the most talked about movies on Netflix in 2020.

9.0

Forgotten Love (2023)

The stunning third take of the classic Polish pre-war melodrama

7.7

His Three Daughters (2024)

Three sisters deal with life and death in this moving family portrait

8.9

Incendies (2011)

Part melodrama, part war thriller, Incendies is gorgeous and heartbreaking from the first scene

9.9

Wind River (2017)

Sicario's screenwriter directs this story of murder in an Indigenous reserve

9.4

A Silent Voice (2016)

A coming-of-age movie that circles around friendship and the atonement of a boy

8.7

Short Term 12 (2013)

Sweet, slow-moving, and possibly life-changing, this American drama shines the light on the chaos and crises of social work in America

9.9

Curated by humans, not algorithms.

agmtw logo

© 2024 agoodmovietowatch, all rights reserved.