HTHAYAT
BİRKAÇ KELİME YAZARAK SİZE YARDIMCI OLABİLİRİZ

Incendies -2010-2010 -

The final frame: Simon and Jeanne, horrified, watch as Nihad receives his letter. He reads it. It confirms that Nawal was his mother. The brother and sister he tortured? His own mother. The children he sired through rape? His own siblings. The film ends not with a scream, but with a silent, open-mouthed stare. The final credit fades to white. Then the song: Radiohead’s “You and Whose Army?” — “We ride tonight… ghost horses.” Incendies 2010 is a deliberate inversion of the Oedipus myth. Oedipus unknowingly kills his father and marries his mother. Here, a son unknowingly tortures his mother and sires children by her (via rape, not marriage—far more brutal). The Oedipus myth asks: Can you escape fate? Villeneuve and Mouawad ask: Can you escape history?

Her silent endurance is the film’s emotional engine. By the time we reach the pool scene, where a prisoner forces a razor from her mouth, or the final revelation where she sits in a chair and simply breathes, Azabal has transformed herself into an icon of suffering. She is the face of all unnamed women erased by history. Warning: Major, irreversible spoilers for Incendies follow. Incendies -2010-2010

Through her investigation, Jeanne discovers that Nawal’s hidden son—the brother she was forced to give up as a baby—was not a refugee lost to war. Instead, he was placed in an orphanage that was bombed. The sole survivor of that bombing, a boy with a scar on his heel, was taken to be raised by a Christian warlord named Abou Tarek. He is brainwashed, renamed "Nihad," and becomes a notorious torturer. The final frame: Simon and Jeanne, horrified, watch