Like a House on Fire
Directed byJesse Noah Klein
Written byJesse Noah Klein
Produced byFanny Drew
Sarah Mannering
William Woods
StarringSarah Sutherland
Jared Abrahamson
Dominique Provost-Chalkley
CinematographyAriel Methot-Bellemare
Edited byRichard Comeau
Music byChristophe Lamarche-Ledoux
Production
companies
Colonelle Films
Woods Entertainment
Distributed byEntract Films
Release date
  • March 26, 2021 (2021-03-26)
Running time
84 minutes
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Like a House on Fire is a Canadian drama film, directed by Jesse Noah Klein and released in 2021.[1] The film stars Sarah Sutherland and Jared Abrahamson.[2]

Plot

Dara returns home two years after running away from her family due to post-partum depression. She learns that her daughter, Isabel, does not remember her and that her husband, Danny, has started a new relationship with Therese, who is seven months pregnant. Dara moves in with her father and stepmother, Jack and Audrey. While trying to earn Danny's trust, and form a relationship with Isabel, Dara also builds the courage to face her own mother, Katherine, who abandoned her as a baby and does not know Dara at all.

Production

The film is a coproduction by Colonelle Films from Quebec and Woods Entertainment from Ontario.[3]

Cast

Release

The film was screened for film critics and distributors in the Industry Selects film market at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival, but was not made available for viewing by the general public.[4] It had its commercial premiere on March 26 at the Cinéma du Parc in Montreal, before being released to video on demand streaming platforms in both English and French versions on March 30.[5]

Critical response

André Duchesne of La Presse rated the film three and a half stars, praising the performances of Sutherland and Abrahamson.[6]

Writing for The Film Stage, Jared Mobarak also reviewed the film positively, writing that "Sutherland is great in the lead role. We see when Dara’s putting on a front and when that façade cracks under the pressure of pretending she can outrun what’s hiding beneath. Abrahamson moves between the emotions of being close to her and knowing that that closeness is no longer possible with authenticity as Provost-Chalkley proves the unsung MVP of the whole thanks to the compassion her Thérèse provides without fail from the moment she enters the frame. Klein could have written their two characters very differently and pushed Dara to a much darker place as a result, but he chose to embrace hope instead. While it’s not the hope she had of preserving her family, the opportunity to enter theirs and share it is hope just the same."[7]

References

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