Empire (UK)

POSSESSOR

★★★★ OUT 27 NOVEMBER / DIGITAL CERT 18 / 104 MINS

- CHRIS HEWITT

Meet the new Cronenberg. Same as the old Cronenberg.

DIRECTOR Brandon Cronenberg

CAST Andrea Riseboroug­h, Christophe­r Abbott, Rossif Sutherland

PLOT Tasya Vos (Riseboroug­h) is an assassin who works for a corporate entity that inserts her consciousn­ess into the bodies of unsuspecti­ng vessels, who then take the rap for her crimes. When she’s implanted into Colin Tate (Abbott) for her next mission, though, things take a startling turn as his subsumed consciousn­ess begins to fight back.

BODIES MELTING INTO each other. A psychic battle on the astral plane. Questions of identity and transmutat­ion and transforma­tion. Outbursts of strong, bloody violence. And even the odd spot of kinky rumpy-pumpy. Yep, Possessor is a Cronenberg movie, alright. But the Cronenberg playing with the family jewels this time is Brandon, son of David, proving here, even more than with his debut Antiviral, that he’s a chip off the old block.

Of course, it’s also entirely possible that the chip has been invaded by the old block. Because Possessor turns on a concept so high, it’s scraping the clouds: what if an assassin could possess someone’s body, shunting the host consciousn­ess into the background, in order to carry out a hit? It’s an ingenious idea, albeit one with echoes of films like The Hidden, that explains how suddenly law-abiding citizens can find themselves guilty of heinous crimes. In a startling opening sequence, we see its grim potential made bloody flesh.

It’s the kind of notion that Christophe­r Nolan could turn into a $200 million blockbuste­r in his sleep, but Cronenberg doesn’t have that kind of cash. Instead, he has a keen eye for an unsettling image (helped by excellent cinematogr­apher Karim Hussain), and a keener interest in the psychologi­cal ramificati­ons of such a violent, possessive act.

When we meet Possessor’s nominal protagonis­t, Tasya Vos, she’s been invading people’s heads for so long that it’s worn away her own. Estranged from her husband and son, and from virtually anything resembling a genuine emotion, it’s another one of those precisely calibrated studies in detachment in which Andrea Riseboroug­h seems to specialise. Persuaded by her boss (Jennifer Jason Leigh) to go back in for a potentiall­y lucrative gig, Vos quickly finds herself in over her head, mainly by being out of it completely.

Which brings us to the film’s true central figure, Christophe­r Abbott’s Colin Tate, a patsy chosen to take the fall for the (planned) murder of Sean Bean’s rich industrial­ist, to whose daughter, Ava (Tuppence Middleton), Tate is engaged. As the bodies pile up, it allows Abbott to impress, going from dead-eyed automaton to sweat-drenched freakouts in next to no time. And, in scenes where Vos and Tate clash, or in which Vos finds herself making love to Ava, it gives Cronenberg plenty of scope to explore issues of identity, reality and control in a way that might just bring a grin to his old man’s face.

It’s all very compelling, well-acted and presented, although there’s a chilliness and a clinical edge that is very Cronenberg-ian, but might keep audiences at arm’s length. Ditto the violence. Stabbings, shootings, pokerings (use your imaginatio­n) — it’s all here, bar exploding heads. A strong stomach is required. If you don’t have one, just use someone else’s.

VERDICT Cronenberg by name, Cronenberg by nature. Possessor sees Brandon wading into territory often explored by his father, but there’s more than enough originalit­y here, visually and thematical­ly, to prevent this from being a mere cover version.

 ??  ?? Space invader: Andrea Riseboroug­h plays Tasya, who takes over people’s heads.
Space invader: Andrea Riseboroug­h plays Tasya, who takes over people’s heads.

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