The Scotsman

Film

Two damaged souls find each other in Michael Pearce’s disturbing debut Beast, while Valeska Grisebac cleverly plays with cinematic tropes and expectatio­ns in Western

- Alistairha­rkness @aliharknes­s

Alistair Harkness reviews British thriller Beast

Beast (15)

Western (12A)

The Deminer (15)

After the relentless tweeness of The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel

Pie Society last week, the Channel Islands provide the setting for an altogether darker, moredistur­bing andconside­rably better film in the Jersey-set Beast. The debut feature from Michael Pearce – who grew up on the island – it’s an intriguing and absorbing psychologi­cal drama that retains a pleasing air of ambiguity as its serial killer-inflected premise gives way to a more nuanced character study. It also provides up-and-coming Irish actress Jessie Buckley with a star-making role.

She plays Moll, a 27-year-old tour guide living a stultifyin­g life with her upper middle-class family. An opening voiceover – inspired, perhaps, by the documentar­y

Blackfish – likens her existence to that of a killer whale in captivity and we soon come to understand that her perfect-from-the-outside life has been deliberate­ly constructe­d in a way that constricts her sense of freedom for her own good – or, at least, her own good as far as her mother (Geraldine James) sees it. Allusions to a violent trauma from her childhood are evident in the way that family members and

friends handle any interactio­n with her, which may be one reason why she connects so strongly with local gamekeeper and handyman Pascal (Johnny Flynn) when he rescues her early one morning from a rapidly souring encounter with a guy she’s just spent the night dancing with in a club.

A rugged, handsome, scar-strewn outsider, Pascal is – like her – treated with suspicion by the more gentrified locals, despite having more claim to local status than them; but he’s also been questioned in an ongoing investigat­ion into the disappeara­nce and murder of a number of young women and Moll seems to take an almost perverse thrill in giving him an alibi when the latest body is uncovered.

Pearce keeps the murders in the background and focuses his energies instead on turning the film into an expertly structured guessing game, raising doubts about Pascal’s innocence and subverting thriller convention­s by making Moll a somewhat unreliable observer of her own life. It’s an auspicious debut, confidentl­y directed, brilliantl­y acted and unsettling to the last frame.

The title of Valeska Grisebach’s third feature, Western, is designed to bring to mind all the tropes associated with the eponymous movie genre. Revolving around a group of German constructi­on workers who arrive in the somewhat hostile environs of Bulgaria to build a dam, it features unruly men living out some retrogress­ive cowboy fantasy version of themselves as a civilising force in a primitive country, forced to grapple with what they deem to be backward locals who don’t appreciate the value

of modern infrastruc­ture.

But as it zeroes in on quiet, considerat­e outsider Meinhard (played by Meinhard Neumann), who distances himself from his brash co-workers and befriends the Bulgarian villagers, the film doesn’t just use the structure of the western to expose the toxic masculinit­y wrapped up in neocolonia­list ideas of progress. It also uses it to question the myth-making traditions of western cinema as a whole – especially its addiction to action, plot and easily won catharsis – by stripping the story of any obvious artifice and using nonactors and poetic realism to draw us into the story instead.

The result is a sometimes absorbing, sometimes inscrutabl­e, but always compelling exploratio­n of the complex ways people try to define themselves in a world where the old certaintie­s have been dismantled and reassemble­d so many times they’ve become meaningles­s. Neumann – whom Grisebach found after auditionin­g 600 non-actors – does remarkable work here as Meinhard, whose sinewy figure and soulful eyes make him seem simultaneo­usly part of the landscape and alienated from it. That’s appropriat­e. A searcher with a mysterious past (he’s spent time in the Foreign Legion and has experience­d some hinted-at family tragedy), his character is on some higher existentia­l quest that he can’t quite articulate but which he neverthele­ss feels intensely and deeply. And as the film builds to a low-key showdown, one that doesn’t go in the direction one might expect, it’s his battered and bruised face that Grisebach focuses on: the character’s dignified resignatio­n to the banality of the closing moments functionin­g as a quietly subversive rejection of western exceptiona­lism and all its destructiv­e associatio­ns.

Following Fakhir, an Iraqi bomb disposal expert whose dedication to his mission sees him disarming thousands of explosives with only a pair of wire-cutters, The Deminer offers a nerve-shredding look at the daily hazards of post-saddam Iraq. What makes Hogir Hirori and co-director Shinwar Kamal’s documentar­y so penetratin­g and unique though – even in the wake

Beast is an auspicious debut, confidentl­y directed, brilliantl­y acted and unsettling to the last frame

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main: Beast; Western; The Deminer
Clockwise from main: Beast; Western; The Deminer
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