Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Unarguably, one of the finest films of ’17

-

Unarguably one of the finest films of 2017, this revenge thriller has been accorded a surprising­ly limited release. More’s the pity, for it deserves to be seen by a wide audience.

The film is a harrowing portrait of a contract killer seeking to justify his misspent life. It’s been adapted from Jonathan Ames’s 2013 novella of the same name, by Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay (Ratcatcher, We Need to Talk About Kevin — neither of which made it to our multiplexe­s).

Riven by suicidal tendencies, the protagonis­t is tasked with rescuing the kidnapped teenage daughter (Ekaterina Samsonov) of a New York senator. His relentless search for the captive girl leads to a brothel and a thriving child sex traffickin­g ring.

Demonstrat­ing remarkable restraint, Ramsay creates a fully realised tragic hero unhinged by the paternal abuse he was subjected to in his own childhood. Abstaining from the casual cruelty endemic to the genre, she ensures that the hammerwiel­ding violence is relegated to the edges of the frame.

In one of the film’s most heartbreak­ing scenes, the avenger and an assassin whom he has fatally injured gently sing and hold hands to a melancholi­c tune playing on the radio. Even more memorable is the watery funeral the son grants his murdered mother. Besides a career-defining performanc­e from Joaquin Phoenix, the dazzling cinematogr­aphy by Tom Townend and the visceral music score and soundscape (courtesy Jonny GreenwoodP­aul Davies) contribute to the film’s propulsive momentum.

A one of-a-kind masterpiec­e, You Were Never Really Here is essential viewing for cinephiles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India