Fire in the Blood Reviews and Ratings
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This film is 84 minutes of sheer illumination and education. It is not to be missed.
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Some of the facts in Fire in the Blood may only represent the surface level of the problem, and the film’s cutaways to an impoverished Africa tend to get a bit repetitive after a point. Gray’s cameras introduce us to various people in India and Africa who contracted HIV but are still alive due to their access to inexpensive medicines in the country.
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It’s well shot, well edited and has the right music to set the mood. “Fire in the Blood” is an important film; it’s a story that needed to be told to the world. Dialogues like, “People are dying and the medicines are in my briefcase.” makes you angry, very angry!
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If good intentions made a documentary, then Fire in the Blood would be brilliant. Unfortunately, that’s not enough. Real-life stories like the ones in this documentary demand, and deserve, more.
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A film that is as riveting as it is engaging, Fire… emerges as the perfect vehicle for a powerful message that has been lost in the cacophony of social media networks and 24×7 news cycles. It is well-shot, sharply edited, and has a fluent, convincing narrative.
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Don’t miss Fire in the Blood. It tells you how YOU can help save lives.