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List Price: $29.98Amazon.com's Price: $14.99 You Save: $14.99 (50%)Prices subject to change.
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Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: DVD
Brand: Koch International
EAN: 0741952310495
Format: Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Koch Lorber Films
Manufacturer: Koch Lorber Films
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Koch Lorber Films
Release Date: July 17, 2007
Running Time: 104 minutes
Sales Rank: 47050
Studio: Koch Lorber Films
Theatrical Release Date: 2005
Editorial Review:
Description: Acclaimed director Tristán Bauer presents the harrowing story of a band of Argentinean soldiers sent to fight an un-winnable war and left to bear the brutal scars of the past. After learning of a friend’s attempted suicide, a journalist goes back to relive his experiences in the Falklands.
Amazon.com: War is bad, and that about sums up the message of Blessed by Fire (a.k.a. Illuminated by Fire), a well-meaning but thinly written drama that boasts some dynamic scenes of battlefront futility. To be fair, director Tristan Bauer's emotionally potent drama did win the Best Narrative Feature award at the 2006 Tribeca Film Festival, and it has the distinction of being the first Argentinian film to openly address the physical and psychological devastation that resulted from the brief 1982 war against British forces in the British-colonized Falkland Islands (or Malvinas, as they're known in Argentina). The legacy of that woefully imbalanced war is tragic beyond comprehension: In Argentina, the number of suicides among Malvinas war veterans is higher than the number of casualties from the war itself, and that sad statistic crucially informs Bauer's story (based on a novel by Engardo Esteban and Gustavo Romero Borri) about a present-day journalist named Esteban (Gaston Pauls) who served in the Malvinas war with Vargas (Pablo Ribba), who's now comatose and hospitalized after attempting suicide with a drug-overdose cocktail. The film flashes back-and-forth from the present to their experiences leading up to and including the decisive battle on Mount Longdon (re-created in a harrowing 20-minute sequence), and while Blessed by Fire is certainly no Saving Private Ryan, its chaotic battle scenes are impressively intense and painstakingly realistic, and Bauer is equally effective in showing the miserably cold battlefield conditions prior to the eruption of violence. As Esteban's memory takes him back to the horrors of battle, his friend's present-day suicide attempt resonates throughout the film, which is surely more powerful for Argentinian viewers than for anyone else. We learn very little about the central character, however, and Paul's performance is too passively blank to draw us deeply into his emotional turmoil. Still, this is one of the few films to deal with what has essentially become a forgotten war, and Bauer's noble reminder offers reassuring proof that Argentina's sacrifices will not be forgotten. --Jeff Shannon
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Overrated perhaps?
I saw this film thinking that because it won an award at the Tribeca Film Festival it would be good. The cinematography was ok and effective in bringing you to what it was like in the Falklands war. However, the acting was pretty mediocre. The actors portraying the Argentine soldiers would have had a more genuine portrayal if they went to boot camp even for a week, e.g. Capt. Dale Dye's boot camp for actors (Saving Private Ryan, Band of Brothers, etc.). The fact that the actors never went to boot ... Read More
Rating: - "It is not easy to watch this film, but I think everybody should. It makes you care"
"Iluminados por el fuego" (= "Blessed by fire") is a wonderful Argentinian film, directed by Tristán Bauer and loosely based on the real experiences of some young Argentinian soldiers that fought in the 1982 Malvinas' war.
One of the main characters is Esteban Leguizamón (Gastón Pauls), a journalist who is informed that Vargas (Pablo Ribba), one of the men he served with in the Malvinas' war, attempted to commit suicide. Vargas suffered from depression, and couldn't live with his ... Read More
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