BREAKING NEWS: CITIZEN KANE LOSES BEST PICTURE TO HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY BREAKING NEWS: HITCHCOCK'S VERTIGO BOMBS AT BOX OFFICE, DEEMED COMMERCIAL FAILURE BREAKING NEWS: KUBRICK'S 2001 TOO CONFUSING, AUDIENCES DEMAND REFUNDS BREAKING NEWS: BRANDO REFUSES OSCAR, SENDS APACHE ACTIVIST IN HIS PLACE BREAKING NEWS: THE EXORCIST FIRST FILM NOMINATED FOR BEST PICTURE FEATURING PROJECTILE DEMON VOMIT BREAKING NEWS: SPIELBERG'S JAWS BREAKS ALL-TIME BOX OFFICE RECORD BREAKING NEWS: LUCAS STEALS SPIELBERG'S BOX OFFICE RECORD WITH STAR WARS BREAKING NEWS: SPIELBERG RECLAIMS RECORD FROM LUCAS WITH E.T. BREAKING NEWS: WATERWORLD BECOMES MOST EXPENSIVE FILM IN HISTORY AT $175 MILLION BREAKING NEWS: SHOWGIRLS SETS RECORD FOR MOST RAZZIES WON BY SINGLE FILM BREAKING NEWS: ACADEMY VOTERS ASKED TO ACTUALLY WATCH ALL NOMINATED FILMS BREAKING NEWS: CITIZEN KANE LOSES BEST PICTURE TO HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY BREAKING NEWS: HITCHCOCK'S VERTIGO BOMBS AT BOX OFFICE, DEEMED COMMERCIAL FAILURE BREAKING NEWS: KUBRICK'S 2001 TOO CONFUSING, AUDIENCES DEMAND REFUNDS BREAKING NEWS: BRANDO REFUSES OSCAR, SENDS APACHE ACTIVIST IN HIS PLACE BREAKING NEWS: THE EXORCIST FIRST FILM NOMINATED FOR BEST PICTURE FEATURING PROJECTILE DEMON VOMIT BREAKING NEWS: SPIELBERG'S JAWS BREAKS ALL-TIME BOX OFFICE RECORD BREAKING NEWS: LUCAS STEALS SPIELBERG'S BOX OFFICE RECORD WITH STAR WARS BREAKING NEWS: SPIELBERG RECLAIMS RECORD FROM LUCAS WITH E.T. BREAKING NEWS: WATERWORLD BECOMES MOST EXPENSIVE FILM IN HISTORY AT $175 MILLION BREAKING NEWS: SHOWGIRLS SETS RECORD FOR MOST RAZZIES WON BY SINGLE FILM BREAKING NEWS: ACADEMY VOTERS ASKED TO ACTUALLY WATCH ALL NOMINATED FILMS
FILM REVIEWS · FEATURES · FESTIVALS · INTERVIEWS Wednesday, April 22, 2026
SILVER SCREEN RIOT
Probably hates your favorite movie. Since 2012.
FESTIVAL REVIEW

Sundance ‘26: ‘TIME AND WATER’ Moves at the Pace of a Glacier, and Feels Just as Cold

By Matt Oakes · January 27, 2026
Sundance ‘26: ‘TIME AND WATER’ Moves at the Pace of a Glacier, and Feels Just as Cold

Sara Dosa’s highly anticipated follow-up to Fire of Love arrives with the same promise of poetic science-meets-humanity. But where her debut doc was incandescent, this one plays like a glacially paced elegy that mistakes lyricism for emotional pull.

Time and Water wants to be an elegy and a time capsule. Icelandic writer Andri Snær Magnason, tasked with eulogizing Okjökull — the first glacier declared “dead” due to climate change and provided a “Glacier Funeral” — folds his nation’s vanishing ice into a meditation on memory, family, and loss. There is something admirable about pivoting away from the didactic, statistic-heavy environmental documentary toward a more generational, emotional register. And Dosa clearly aims to make us feel what’s disappearing rather than just understand it.

But the result too often feels like watching someone else’s home videos. Maybe moving in fragments, though numbing in the long stretches between them. The film leans heavily on photographs, home movies, and shared memories, but these artifacts never quite build into an experience worth inhabiting. Instead of pulling us into the majesty of ice and the weight of time, the film nearly insists we appreciate these majesty of the glaciers and the impact of their loss because… well, because it does.

Part of this failure lies in the central subject’s somewhat icy demeanor. Magnason’s narration is as steady as a fjord in January, measured to the point of monotony. There’s thematic symmetry in having a Scandinavian subject speak about cold loss with cool affect, but thematic symmetry doesn’t equal cinematic engagement. If anything, his restrained delivery magnifies the film’s core problem: too little emotional tension for those outside his circle.

This is a movie about loss, but it loses something else along the way: urgency, momentum, and, occasionally, the viewer’s attention. Where Fire of Love fused spectacle and intimacy into something electric, Time and Water drifts like its subject matter: quietly, slowly, and without enough pull to justify its pace.

In the end, appreciating this film requires a particular patience and a willingness to be moved by implication rather than experience. It’s generous in intent – and its message of conservationism should not be ignored –  but as a cinematic experience, undercuts itself in execution. Cryogenic in tone, elegiac in ambition, but too cool to truly feel.

CONCLUSION: ‘Time and Water‘ moves at the pace of a glacier, and unfortunately feels just as cold. Sara Dosa’s anticipated follow-up to ‘Fire of Love’ is ultimately a major snooze about ice loss that struggles to thaw. 

C

Check out our full 2026 Sundance International Film Festival coverage here.

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