A film whose quietly flooring opening frames of a vast landscape becoming home to a compassionate story of a Hungarian-Canadian family navigating an uncertain world together already signal it as a major work, writer/director Sophy Romvari’s intimate and incisive “Blue Heron” only grows even greater from there. This is because the stunningly confident feature debut, while deeply personal in a way Romvari has been in her equally spectacular shorts, is one that expands outward in time just as it draws us closer in emotion.
It’s a film you can’t shake your way free of once it has you in its grasp and wouldn’t ever want to.
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‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.imdb.com ’
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