The first ten minutes of Rebuilding Paradise are dispatches from hell, consisting only of footage shot by citizens and first responders while听a firestorm from the 2018 Camp Fire raged through Paradise, California. A man aims a garden hose at a massive wall of flames, then almost immediately drops it and says, 鈥淣ope, sorry, time to abandon ship,鈥 as if apologizing to the inferno itself. An officer tells a woman in her car, 鈥淲e are 100 percent surrounded by fire.鈥 The woman responds, 鈥淎re we gonna die?鈥 A couple sob听with relief as they drive out of a burning road and see clear skies ahead, before turning the camera behind them听at a blazing sign that reads, 鈥淢ay You Find Paradise to Be All Its Name Implies.鈥
Ron Howard鈥檚 documentary about the fire鈥檚 aftermath, which premiered on on November 8, is laced with equally brutal moments over its remaining 80 minutes, but it鈥檚 often hopeful as well. In the end, 95 percent of the buildings in Paradise were destroyed and 85 people died, while those who survived听lived with benzene-poisoned water, indefinite displacement, and post-traumatic stress disorder. The film shows locals grappling with the question听of whether to rebuild in a high-risk natural disaster area, fighting to hold the Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E) Company accountable for , and discussing how fire management needs to change. But it鈥檚 most effective as a witness to the particular horrors of this disaster, even while acknowledging that the fire is anything but an isolated tragedy.
Rebuilding Paradise is sweeping in every sense, with drone shots of gnarled building remains, interviews with many听residents of the small town (population听about 20,000), and updates on recovery efforts every three months for the first year after the fire. But it also feels very much like a slice-of-life film, with a focus on the everyday logistics of getting life back to normal. For example: Will it be possible to hold the high school graduation on the school鈥檚 football field, even though the surrounding trees are now a safety hazard? How quickly can thousands of people get permits to start rebuilding their houses when Paradise residents usually construct about eight new homes a year? Trauma is constantly in the background of this daily grind. 鈥淚 work with kids on trauma counseling, which has been tough for me, since I almost died in the fire myself,鈥 says school psychologist Carly Ingersoll. You鈥檝e got to have a cold heart not to feel touched by the resilience depicted here.
Still, the film鈥檚 broad scope means Rebuilding Paradise isn鈥檛 much use to anyone hoping for a better understanding of what caused the fire and what we can learn from it. We see some of the anger directed at PG&E听but don鈥檛 hear about the company鈥檚 long history of in failing to prevent wildfire ignitions from power lines. We hear ever so briefly from Danny Davis, a Hupa fire and fuels field technician听who mentions how his own community has , but the film doesn鈥檛 go听much further into fire policy. And we spend some time with former mayor Woody Culleton as he pushes to rebuild his home, as well as other residents who are struggling with whether or not to rebuild. But again, it would require another documentary to tackle all the complexities around rebuilding or developing in areas that are at听. For that reason, the movie pairs well with the book听听by Guardian reporters Alastair Gee and Dani Anguiano. Their ticktock of the events slows down to explain a lot of this background, along with details that only make the film鈥檚 visuals more terrifying, like the fact that at one point the firestorm was moving as fast as 21 miles per hour鈥攚hile evacuees were stuck in traffic on the way out of town.听
Rebuilding Paradise is still a worthwhile watch for its emotional impact. School superintendent Michelle John works to make sure that (spoiler alert) the high school seniors can indeed graduate on their football field, as always, and we see their moving ceremony. The community spirit really crests toward the end, when Culleton presents a neighbor with a rebuilt home and Paradise High School students raise money for tornado victims in Alabama听because they now know how it feels to live through a natural disaster. For all its inspirational moments, the documentary鈥檚 message about the future鈥攆or Paradise and the rest of the world鈥攊s unvarnished. As the final moments of the film remind us, climate change is making devastation of this scale the . 鈥淚 hate this frickin鈥 view,鈥 says John, who spends most of the documentary working relentlessly to cheer up her colleagues and students,听while looking out over the town in a moment of despair. 鈥淲ouldn鈥檛 it be nice just to wake up and have this be a bad dream听and have no burnt-down crap everywhere?鈥
Now streaming on ,听, and听.