When scientists Katia and Maurice Krafft married in 1970, they headed to a place where few couples would choose to honeymoon: an active volcano.
But Mount Stromboli off the coast of Sicily could not have suited them better as the love they shared was equaled only by their passion for the study of volcanoes.
The Oscar-nominated National Geographic documentary Fire of Love, directed by Sara Dosa, explores the Kraffts’ obsession with Earth’s explosive displays, a pursuit that would ultimately cost them their lives.
Instead of presenting the story in dry scientific terms, Dosa and her team explore it in a more expressive way — as an epic love story. “It actually came quite early on in our process that we got the idea of telling Fire of Love as a love story,” Dosa explained as she and her cinematic collaborators appeared at Deadline’s Contenders Film: The Nominees virtual event. “We came across a sentence in a book that Maurice authored that said, ‘For me, Katia and volcanoes, it is a love story.’ And with that, we really felt like Maurice was kind of handling down a thesis statement on their lives, or perhaps a prism through which we could interpret their vast legacy.” Katia trained as a physicist and chemist, while Maurice studied geology.
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