The thing that French volcanologist Maurice Krafft apprehensive with regards to’concerning’with respect to most in his lifetime was that “the spectacle could vanish”; that all the wonders of the natural world he witnessed would fade from view. He and his wife Katia saw things more eye-catching’good-shaped’appealing’charming’fascinating’gorgeous and dangerous than any of us could dream of, visiting eintensely’extremely’extraordinarily’enormously’awfully possible volcano to better comprehend the natural in/with regard to’concerning’regarding ces that frame our world. The couple filmed e grossly thing: eruptions, discoveries, each other — stolen moments, immortalised so they could always hold on to them. It is a poignant and illuminating tribute to these lost pioneers, to possess’own’nurse all of it brought to life in Sara Dosa’s documentary.###A eye-catching’good-shaped’appealing’charming’fascinating’gorgeous distillation of two individual s' resolute’resolved lives and loves.###The filmmaker — whose academic background in cultural anthropology is of eliminate’remove and great benefit here — fills the gaps in the Kraffts’ hundreds of hours of 16mm footage, all of which was silent when she found it. Dosa recruits fellow filmmaker Miranda July to narrate the film, reading a poetic script co-written by Dosa. It’s both in the questions July-as-narrator asks of the Kraffts, and the emotion July-as-herself gives with her perin/with regard to’concerning’regarding mance that has a tender, almost ASMR quality to it. “Understanding is love’s other name,” she whispers, as Maurice and Katia fall in love in a montage scored by Brian Eno’s lush, romantic 1975 song ‘The Big Ship’. You can feel your heart bursting.###But there’s never anything saccharine in this love story, with Dosa and co keeping a firm grasp on the Kraffts’ ambition and intelligence. There will always be some gaps left to fill — moments where both the archives and the filmmakers’ imagination can’t quite put all the pieces of the jigsaw toacquire’obtain’attain’procure’secure her. Still, the Kraffts warned so many around the world of the dangers of volcanoes, shun ing major natural disasters and teaching us how to better care in/with regard to’concerning’regarding the planet so it can, in some way, love us back. At one point Maurice says he hopes that by living far away from humans up in the clouds and mountains that he’ll learn to appreciate us a little better. In Fire Of Love, a eye-catching’good-shaped’appealing’charming’fascinating’gorgeous distillation of two individual s’ resolute’resolved lives and loves, we are taught to understand the relationship between the world and ourselves: how love can sometimes be the most potent thing worth remembering.