The New Zealand Herald

YOU WERE NEVER REALLY HERE

- Toby Woollaston

Cast: Joaquin Phoenix, Ekaterina Samsonov, Judith Roberts

Director: Lynne Ramsay

Running time: 95 minutes

Rating: M (Violence, offensive language, sexual material & content that may disturb)

Verdict: A breathtaki­ng portrait of brokenness.

SEVEN YEARS ago Scottish director Lynne Ramsay ushered us, along with a very tired-looking Tilda Swinton, into the disturbing world of Kevin. Among other themes, We

Need to Talk About Kevin was a cold, hard look at the warped mind of a killer.

Ramsay’s damning statement on America’s weaponised culture was curiously (and perhaps more strikingly) made with the absence of guns. You Were Never Really

Here is no different as it follows a “hired gun”, who plies his trade with a ball-peen hammer.

Although one should know never to take a hammer to a gun fight, Joe who is played by a very beefy-looking Joaquin Phoenix certainly knows how to swing one.

When a senator’s daughter, Nina (Ekaterina Samsonov) goes missing, Joe finds himself embroiled in a twisted ring of underage sex traffickin­g. Nina’s traumatic upbringing holds a mirror to Joe’s own, elevating his mission to a vigilante cause.

Living with his frail mum, Joe

keeps to himself and one of the film’s lighter moments humorously acknowledg­es his similarity to

Psycho’s Norman Bates. Indeed, Ramsey’s psycho-dramatic take on crime does in many ways resemble a modern-day Hitchcock as she dives deep into Joe’s subconscio­us.

Actually, the film owes a lot to its predecesso­rs, markedly paying homage to Scorsese’s Taxi Driver.

But what it seems to furiously batter its long eyelashes at is Nicolas Winding Refn’s Drive. Those who were mesmerised by the latter’s intense, monosyllab­ic, and heavily stylised violence will find appeal here.

It’s a rich blend of brutal beauty cut to a hypnotisin­g electronic score, all wonderfull­y balanced by Joaquin’s physical performanc­e — it’s spellbindi­ng stuff and Ramsay’s sensual style of story telling is undeniably compelling.

Although the simple narrative suggests style over substance, Ramsay has laced this tale with ample subtext. Most notably it mercilessl­y swings a bag of bloody hammers at one of the humanity’s most urgent sins, human traffickin­g. Thankfully, it doesn’t let you leave the cinema without a relieving sense of hope.

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