Empire (UK)

The day shall come

- Terri WHITE

★★★★ Out 11 OCTOBER Cert 15 / 88 mins

Director Chris Morris

CAST Marchánt Davis, Danielle Brooks, Anna Kendrick, Denis O’hare, Kayvan Novak

Plot Preacher and wannabe revolution­ary Moses (Davis) promises to lead a small band of men in a race war while at the same time struggling to support his wife and children. When cash for a manufactur­ed terrorism plot comes his way, mild-mannered Moses finds himself caught in a tense homeland security sting. SATIRIST CHRIS MORRIS’ second film has been a decade in waiting, after the awardwinni­ng, incendiary Four Lions. And it’s a film that was made almost entirely in silence, with very little known until its premiere at SXSW earlier this year. Morris, as you’d expect, would like The Day Shall Come to speak for itself. And the first thing you learn as it opens is that it’s “based on a hundred true stories”, a hundred true stories gleaned over months of research that apparently prove that truth is stranger and more surreal than any fiction Morris could ever craft.

Miami-based amateur anti-violence preacher Moses Al Shabaz (Davis) is the leader of an eccentric local army made up of less than one fistful of followers. he also suffers from unspecifie­d mental health issues that result in hallucinat­ions and paranoia, including the belief that he can summon dinosaurs.

he and his followers may be harmless — with the much talked-about race war being more like a bumbled battle preamble on horseback in improvised costumes — but they’re no match for an FBI thirsty for “the next 9/11” at any and all cost. “Next thing you know, the Statue of Liberty’s wearing a burqa and we’ve beheaded Bruce Springstee­n,” says FBI boss Andy Mudd (o’hare), in a scene you hope is grossly exaggerate­d fiction but fear really, really isn’t. Anna Kendrick is on biting, hilarious form as Kendra Glack, the ambitious young FBI agent who doesn’t so much see an opportunit­y to nail a terrorist before they commit a dangerous crime as the chance to advance her career with a major sting under her belt.

Most compelling — staggering­ly so, for a first-time lead film role — is Davis as Moses, who is simultaneo­usly frustratin­g and charming and has a natural warmth that grounds the story, even as Morris and co-writer Jesse Armstrong send it off in increasing­ly fantastica­l and farcical directions. he’s more than ably aided by Danielle Brooks as wife Venus, who first attempts to save her husband and then herself as she realises his latest madcap scheme is spinning out of control.

Though parts are dense, compounded by a zippy runtime, the film is never allowed to become heavy-handed or didactic in the truths it dispenses, even when those truths get right to the heart of the structural injustice and racism that underpins American society. For ultimately, the truth as laid out by the film’s sobering finale is devastatin­gly simple and real: that the absurdity, not just of homeland security, but of the entire current political landscape, is far outweighed by the human cost paid over and over as a consequenc­e.

 ??  ?? Well, what else to do when they’ve not provided a chair?
Well, what else to do when they’ve not provided a chair?

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