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  1. Feb 24, 2022 · ‘The Burning SeaReview: Smoke on the Water An oil-rig accident in the North Sea kicks off this well-acted, pleasantly predictable survival thriller. Share full article

  2. Feb 25, 2022 · “The Burning Sea” starts and finishes with a preachy but studiously inoffensive bookend sequence featuring chilly oil rig rep William Lie (Bjørn Floberg), who tells viewers—on-camera, as if he were the subject of a talking head documentary—about Norway’s complicated history with offshore drilling.

  3. Feb 25, 2022 · Feb. 24, 2022 6:34 PM PT. A successor to the hit Norwegian disaster films “The Wave” and “The Quake,” the oil-spill drama “The Burning Sea” is a blunt reminder of two intertwined truths:...

  4. Feb 23, 2022 · The hook of “The Burning Sea” is, or is supposed to be, its shaggy-actor Norwegian realism: the fact that it’s a disaster movie that shuns disaster-movie bombast.

  5. Feb 25, 2022 · The New York Times. Feb 24, 2022. We get little more than a bland romance, smoothly professional special effects and a story that’s finally too predictable to raise the heart rate. Read More. By Jeannette Catsoulis FULL REVIEW.

    • (9)
    • John Andreas Andersen
    • PG-13
    • the burning sea review new york times newspaper1
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  6. Oct 20, 2021 · Review: The Burning Sea. by Vittoria Scarpa. 20/10/2021 - Norwegian director John Andreas Andersen's disaster movie imagines the collapse of all the oil platforms in the North Sea, with great special effects and a brave heroine.

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  8. The Burning Sea may ultimately be too uptight for its own good, but there’s enough here to satisfy disaster aficionados who’ve already been here before and only really want to root for more of the same.

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