THINGS WE LOST IN THE FIRE
RYAN: Thank you for going to see the tearfest, “Things We Lost in the Fire,” without me. How was Halle Berry?
CAROLINE: I really liked this movie, though I don’t know if anyone is seeing it…
RYAN: Actually what I asked was, “How was Halle Berry?” That’s all I care about.
CAROLINE: She’s great, as is Benicio Del Toro.
RYAN: He’s so hard to look at that I don’t even know how you could sit through this movie.
CAROLINE: Seriously? I think he’s kind of hot in a weird, devilish way.
RYAN: Ew, he’s got weird discoloration under his eyes, and his hair and his facial features are strange…how could you find him hot? You mean, like interestingly hot?
CAROLINE: Yeah, like sexy ugly. He’s got that raspy voice and is just such a good actor. This movie is really a character study of him and Halle Berry. Basically, she loses her husband in a tragic way and Benicio Del Toro was his childhood friend who became a drug addict. Halle never liked him, but they come together in the wake of the husband’s death.
RYAN: Did you cry?
CAROLINE: I didn’t actually shed a tear, but I welled up for sure, and gasped a few times. There’s high drama in this movie, and several flashbacks to happier times between Halle and her husband, who’s played by the empirically sexy David Duchovny.
CAROLINE: It’s definitely the kind of movie that you see because of the stars. They give great performances, but it’s a heartbreaking movie that isn’t necessarily fun to watch. It’s very well done though by this Danish director, Susanne Bier.
RYAN: Is it long and boring?
CAROLINE: Not at all. It’s about 2 hours, and it’s one of the better movies I’ve seen this year. I just don’t know that everyone will want to see it because of the subject matter, but I definitely recommend it.
RYAN: That sounds like your bottom line to me.
CAROLINE: Indeed.


Tracy October 25, 2007
This movie looks so depressing but I might have to see it because of Benicio. I’m with Caroline – he’s sexy.