Kelly locks her in the plane, leaving her to fly off alone. Cut to Ava-dressed to the nines and looking ridiculously incredible-and Kelly arriving on a private runway. +1 coronavirus relatability - some get temperatures taken just to enter the grounds or area of a business or otherwise…you get the idea Details as to why will eventually arrive, but never be expanded upon. The reason being: it’s back to the town they grew up in, which was not a pleasant time for Ava. Surprisingly, after a chain of quick events, Kelly manages to find a flight for him and Ava, which may seem like a great thing, but she is fucking pissed to hear about it. 1 coronavirus relatability - we still have flights Okay, this is worse than coronavirus, and this is the first of many points I’m going to make to compare and contrast this film with our current situation: They arrive to the airport and flights are cancelled. Ava (Jenna Lyng Adams), a semi-famous actress, and her boyfriend/fiancé/fuck-buddy-it’s never made clear-Kelly ( Jackson Davis) are stuck in traffic, trying to get the hell out of Dodge, which, in this case, is Los Angeles, amid the first wave of an influenza pandemic. Fortunately, Before the Fire is not one of those things.īefore the Fire, directed by Charlie Buhler and written by/starring Jenna Lyng Adams, immediately strikes us with familiarity. It goes without saying that some of those ‘opportunities’ will just capitalize on it because people love that stuff. Living in a COVID-19-enveloped world gives everyone and everything somewhat unique opportunities to capitalize, sympathize, or otherwise off our current situation.
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