It looks like you’re referencing the film Incendies (2010), directed by Denis Villeneuve. The way you wrote it – "Incendies -2010-2010" – suggests you might be dealing with a data entry or metadata formatting issue (e.g., duplicate year, incorrect delimiter).
If you’re asking me to develop a feature based on Incendies in a software, data, or interactive context, here are several possible interpretations and implementations: Incendies -2010-2010
Twins Jeanne and Simon Marwan receive their notary mother Nawal’s will. Instead of a traditional burial, she gives them two envelopes: one to be delivered to a father they believed was dead, and another to a brother they never knew existed. If the twins fail, their mother will remain unburied. They travel to an unnamed Middle Eastern country (evoking Lebanon during its civil war) and are forced to reconstruct their mother’s secret past—a journey into horror, resilience, and impossible tragedy. It looks like you’re referencing the film Incendies
Incendies 2010 is a deliberate inversion of the Oedipus myth. Oedipus unknowingly kills his father and marries his mother. Here, a son unknowingly tortures his mother and sires children by her (via rape, not marriage—far more brutal). The Oedipus myth asks: Can you escape fate? Villeneuve and Mouawad ask: Can you escape history? Performances
The answer is no. Nawal’s entire life is an attempt to find her firstborn. In finding him, she loses her soul. Her twins, born of assault, are the only pure thing she has left—and she burdens them with the weight of her truth. The film argues that silence is a kind of death, but truth is a kind of bomb. It destroys everything.
The recurring motif of “fire” is literal and metaphorical. Nawal sets fires to escape. The civil war is a fire consuming a nation. The incinerating power of truth burns through all lies. By the end, every character is ash. And yet, there is a strange, terrible hope in the final image of the swimmer—the father, Abou Tarek, stripped of his power, stepping into a swimming pool. Water extinguishes fire. But is it enough?