The National - News

A Deer price to pay awaits surgeon and family in dark art-house success

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The Killing of a Sacred Deer

Director: Yorgos Lanthimos Starring: Colin Farrell, Nicole Kidman, Barry Keoghan, Alicia Silverston­e

The current golden child of the art-house cinema world is back on our screens, following 2015’s delightful­ly surreal, and unexpected­ly commercial­ly successful,

The Lobster. From the very beginning, however, Yorgos Lanthimos makes it clear that, despite his new high profile, he won’t be making any steps towards the mainstream just yet. The Killing of a Sacred Deer opens with a close-up of live open-heart surgery, immediatel­y both provocativ­e and attention-grabbing, and it carries on in the same vein for the next two hours.

Colin Farrell’s Dr Murphy is a rich, successful heart surgeon, and he seems to have it all – a beautiful wife (Nicole Kidman’s Anne), a big, gorgeous house and two sweet children. There is something a little strange about Murphy – the emotionles­s monotone in which he discusses everything from the relative merits of leather and metal watch straps to life and death is a little disconcert­ing, but initially we put this down to the fact that he is a little socially awkward. As the film moves on and the Pinteresqu­e banality persists, the disquiet grows and is emphasised by distant, disconnect­ed camera work that never lets us feel too close to the characters, as well as an unsettling soundtrack of discordant, classicall­y influenced music-meets-noise.

Murphy also has a strange relationsh­ip with Martin, a teenage boy whom he showers with gifts and meets regularly for lunch at their favourite diner. Initially, it appears there may be some kind of weird sugar-daddy relationsh­ip going on, but we soon learn that Martin is the son of a patient who died under Murphy’s scalpel.

Gradually, Martin ingratiate­s himself with Murphy’s family, then drops the bomb. Despite his extreme politeness and deadpan delivery, Martin is a vengeful soul, and to make amends for his crime, Murphy must kill one of his own family. His wife and kids will fall ill: “Stage one is paralysis, stage two refusing all food, stage three bleeding from the eyes, then they die,” he informs Murphy without a hint of malice or feeling. If Murphy doesn’t choose one to sacrifice, then all three will die from the illness.

Thus unravels an engrossing moral dilemma, made all the more fascinatin­g by the amoral way in which every character approaches it. Life goes on largely as normal, save for the inconvenie­nce of the paralysis, while the family engage in a bizarre balloon debate behind each other’s backs to convince Murphy of their worth.

At once a horror, a comedy, a thriller and a family drama, it will have you transfixed from beginning to end.

The Killing of a Sacred Deer screens today at 6pm at the Madinat Theatre, then goes on general release in cinemas from Thursday

 ?? Diff ?? Barry Keoghan’s character torments Colin Farrell’s Dr Murphy in ‘The Killing of a Sacred Deer’
Diff Barry Keoghan’s character torments Colin Farrell’s Dr Murphy in ‘The Killing of a Sacred Deer’

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