Burning (2021 film) explained

Burning
Director:Eva Orner
Producer:Jonathan Schaerf
Ben Silverman
Howard Owens
Jason Byrne
Forrest Borie
Music:Pascal Babare
Thomas Rouch
Cornel Wilczek
Starring:Greg Mullins
Mike Cannon-Brookes
Daisy Jeffrey
Scott Morrison
Country:Australia
Studio:Amazon Studios

Burning is a 2021 Australian documentary film by Eva Orner and Jonathan Schaerf, which documents the massive fires of the 2019–20 Australian bushfire season.

The film discusses previous bushfire seasons in Australia and compares those to the 2019–2020 fires from the perspective of firefighters, residents and the Australian people. Burning notes that the 2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires burned 2.2 million acres, the 2020 California wildfires burned 4.4 million acres, while the Australian Black Summer fires of 2019–2020 burned 59 million acres.[1] It features interviews with environmentalist Tim Flannery and author Bruce Pascoe.[2]

Politically, Burning focuses on the Youth Climate Movement during this time period and the inaction of prime minister Scott Morrison.[3]

Reception

Burning has been compared to An Inconvenient Truth for its precision and fact-based presentation of the issues by showing the perspective of firefighters, residents, young people, tech entrepreneurs, and politicians. The film has a 93% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Burning, a new documentary screening on Amazon about the 2020 bushfires, acts as an urgent call to action . 23 November 2021 . Jan 17, 2022.
  2. Web site: Mattes . Ari . Burning is the slickest film about climate change since An Inconvenient Truth – and that's its problem . 2022-04-25 . The Conversation . 8 November 2021 . en.
  3. Web site: Burning: Australia's Black Summer bushfire documentary lays out who the villains and heroes are . Jan 17, 2022.
  4. Web site: Burning (2021), Rotten Tomatoes . . Jan 17, 2022.