The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

The Day Shall Come (Cert 15, 88 mins)

- TJ MCKAY

The war against terror is conducted by career-driven buffoons in director Chris Morris’s barbed satire.

Supposedly “based on a hundred true stories”, The Day Shall Come shares a few strands of creative DNA with Morris’s directoria­l debut Four Lions and transplant­s the hunt for radicals and terrorists to the sun-baked beaches of Miami.

Ludicrousn­ess and uncomforta­ble plausibili­ty walk side by side in Morris’s picture, which paints US law enforcemen­t as a circus of clowns willing to abuse the system to prevent a repeat of 9/11, even if that means putting innocent men and women behind bars. Dialogue bares its teeth.

One agent casually explains that Muslims are fair targets in the current climate but African-Americans are not because, “We’re down with brown but black is whack”.

Miami-based preacher Moses Al Shabaz (Marchant Davis) presides over the ramshackle Star Of Six community farm and mission.

This well-intentione­d movement hopes to affect lasting change for poor people in the community “without the gun weapon”.

Moses received his call to arms when God chose to speak to him through a duck.

The congregati­on includes his wife Venus (Danielle Brooks), their daughter Rosa (Calah Lane) and three loyal lieutenant­s – Farmer Afrika (Andrel McPherson), Farmer Evangelist­e (Curtiss Cook Jr) and Farmer X (Malcolm M Mays), so-called because he loves the X-Wing fighters in Star Wars, not because of a deep spiritual affinity with human rights activist Malcolm X.

Undercover FBI operative Reza (Kayvan Novak) brokers the sale of AK47 assault rifles to pacifist Moses, who intends to paint the weapons white and use them as fence post for the mission compound.

The deal brings the Star Of Six to the attention of Agent Kendra Glack (Anna Kendrick) at the FBI’s anti-terrorism unit in Miami, led by station chief Andy Mudd (Denis O’Hare).

He sanctions a sting operation involving FBI informant Nura (Pej Vahdat), who will pose as a wealthy sheikh and agree to supply Moses with fake nuclear warheads as proof of the mission’s dark intentions.

The Day Shall Come benefits from a strong lead performanc­e from Davis and appealing spiky support courtesy of Kendrick as a woman drowning in a sea of testostero­ne.

Laughs are distribute­d evenly across the 88 minutes but the sharpness of the writing is often blunted by slapstick and cartoonish characters.

Those Four Lions from 2010 have been declawed.

 ??  ?? Marchant Davis as Moses Al Shabaz in The Day Shall Come.
Marchant Davis as Moses Al Shabaz in The Day Shall Come.

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