Lucy Walker’s 2021 documentary asked hard questions about living with fires in California

Published on 15 January 2025 at 11:12

NEW YORK —  When Lucy Walker debuted her harrowing documentary about California wildfires, “Bring Your Own Brigade,” at the Sundance Film Festival in 2021, it was during peak COVID-19. Not the best time for a movie on a wholly different scourge.

 

“It was really hard,” the Oscar-nominated filmmaker says now. “I didn’t blame people for not wanting to watch a film about the fires in the middle of the pandemic, because it was just too much horror.”

 

And so the film, though acclaimed — it was named one of the 10 best films of the year by the New York Times — didn’t reach an audience as large as Walker had hoped, with its urgent display of the human cost of wildfires and its tough, crucial questions for the future.

 

That could change. Walker thinks people may now be more receptive to her message, given the devastating wildfires that have wrought havoc on Los Angeles itself the past week. Firefighters were preparing on Tuesday to attack new blazes amid warnings that winds combined with severely dry conditions created a “particularly dangerous situation.”

 

“This is probably the moment where it becomes undeniable,” she said in an interview.

She added: “It does feel like people are now asking the question that I was asking a few years ago, like, ‘Is it safe to live in Los Angeles? And why is this happening, and what can we do about it?’ And the good news is that there are some things we can do about it. What’s tricky is that they’re really hard to accomplish.”


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