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The film is a celebration of the imagery captured by volcanologists Katia and Maurice Krafft. Designed as a 'requiem', the film is a non-traditional biography with long sections of volcano footage supported by music and sparse narration. [1] [2]
The film tells the story of French volcanologists Katia and Maurice Krafft, a daring couple bound by their love for each other and their shared obsession with volcanoes. . Through rare archival footage and a poetic French New Wave-inspired narrative, the film chronicles their two-decade journey of capturing the Earth’s most explosive phenomena, standing perilously close to fiery eruptions in ...
Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, the Kraffts documented various volcanoes and volcanic eruptions; often Maurice would film them while Katia took photographs. [11] In 1987, the Kraffts featured in "The Volcano Watchers", an episode in the sixth season of the PBS series Nature .
Dosa will direct and produce the film which centers on volcanologists Katia and Maurice Krafft, who sought to understand the magic of volcanoes by capturing the most explosive imagery ever ...
"Fire of Love's" Maurice and Katia Krafft pursued knowledge of volcanoes relentlessly. That pursuit so "deeply and dearly" kept them together.
They erupt from you, one could say.It’s a whole other thing to make that figurative language and those themes literal: Katia and Maurice Krafft fell in love and died on a volcano.Fire of Love ...
When scientists Katia and Maurice Krafft married in 1970, they headed to a place where few couples would choose to honeymoon: an active volcano. But Mount Stromboli off the coast of Sicily could ...
A recounting of how two obsessed, real-life volcanologists fell in love and chased their passion for molten eruptions together is, hands down, the documentary of the year