Horst in Translation ([email protected])
HBO's "Triangle: Remembering the Fire" is an American 40-minute documentary short film from 2011, so this one had its 5th anniversary last year. It was written and directed by Emmy winner Daphne Pinkerson and narrated by 2-time Emmy-nominated actress Tovah Feldshuh. I think given the subject, it was a good choice to pick a female narrator and she did a decent job overall. This is the story of a New York tragedy from over a century ago and it is one that has been forgotten by many. I here in Germany have probably never come across it at all, so it is good that Pinkerson brought it back to our attention recently. It is about a huge fire that happened in a high New York building and killed almost 150 people in there, most of them female workers. We find out about the reasons for the fire, the details of the tragedy, the search for those responsible, but also about the historic impact it had in terms of how laws were changed in favor of workers afterward. This development is evidence of how these poor women did not die for nothing and why America is such a great country that they used this terrible tragedy to bring improvement to future generations.It was a good and interesting watch overall I would say with many photos from the old days that added a lot to the difficult endeavor of taking us 100 years back. But I must also say that something here was missing for me to really get as emotionally involved here as I hoped I would. I guess awards bodies were feeling the same as they did not hand this film the recognition you'd expect given the subject. I totally think this could have been an Oscar nominee, maybe even winner. One thing I did not like too much is how they interviewed great-grandchildren etc. of the victims because honestly they had very little to add and obviously their grief was not too accurate either as they frequently did not even know the victims personally, even if they were family. So yeah maybe it would have been a better watch at 30 minutes and with more interviews with historians or no interviews at all. Still, I think there is definitely more strong than weak in this one here, but I also can't stop thinking that this could have been even better and that the greatness that was possible here had not been achieved. Nonetheless, go see it as it is definitely on the underseen side, especially if you have a strong connection to the city of New York.