Hartford Courant

Portrait of Bundy friendship well-crafted but lacks purpose

- By Katie Walsh

The Ted Bundy story has already been oft-picked over, from the books of Ann Rule, to the recent Netflix film “Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil and Vile,” starring Zac Efron as the notorious serial murderer. What more can be said about him? It seems we still need to understand why he did what he did, which is the central question of the new film “No Man of God,” directed by Amber Sealey, written by Kit Lesser, which explores the relationsh­ip between Bundy and FBI agent Bill Hagmaier, who forged a strange friendship in the last years of Bundy’s life.

“No Man of God” is not a biopic of either Bundy (Luke Kirby) or Hagmaier (Elijah Wood). Rather, it is a portrait of their short but significan­t connection, hashed out in an interview room in Florida State Prison from 1985 to 1989. Hagmaier was a rookie agent at the newly formed National Center for Analysis of Violent Crime, who volunteers to interview Bundy in prison in hopes of understand­ing his motivation­s for committing the rapes and murders for which he has been convicted and sentenced to death. The goal is to use Bundy to further develop knowledge of serial killers

and potentiall­y even close a few cases.

“No Man of God” is not unlike a special episode of David Fincher’s FBI profiling Netflix series “Mindhunter”: a young agent gets a little too close to a seductive psychopath in the search for answers that might serve a bigger cause. But there’s something almost soulful in the way that Wood’s Hagmaier transcends the danger of

getting too close to someone like Bundy. He respects and trusts him as much as he condemns him, both figurative­ly and literally. He always tells the truth, which stands stalwart and stark against Bundy’s twisted, self-aggrandizi­ng personal rhetoric.

There are a few themes that Bundy repeats again and again in “No Man of God”: that Hagmaier just wants to understand him, and it’s in this understand­ing, this seeing of Bundy as a person and not a monster, that they are able to find a sliver of room for friendship. He also repeatedly reminds Hagmaier that they could just as easily swap places in this life, a mantra that seems to be more of a comfort to Bundy than a statement of fact.

“No Man of God” is impeccably and carefully directed by Sealey, and the craft on display is remarkable, from the precise, yet precisely off-kilter cinematogr­aphy by Karina Silva that animates the claustroph­obic room where they hold their conversati­ons, and the unsettling electronic score by Clarice Jensen, which co-mingles with the camera work to create a sense of achingly slow-burn building tension. Abstract interstiti­al montages let off a bit of steam with a propulsive electro soundtrack. The film is beautifull­y acted by Wood and Kirby; Kirby is especially compelling in such a challengin­g role, equal parts cajoling, grandiose and terrifying. His Bundy is mystifying yet always humane.

However, there’s a nagging feeling that persists during “No Man of God,” as one struggles to discern why this film exists or what it’s trying to say. While it explores this unique dynamic between these two men, a relationsh­ip that made Hagmaier a legend in criminal profiling, it doesn’t necessaril­y feel particular­ly illuminati­ng about Bundy. What Hagmaier concludes is that Bundy committed these crimes because he wanted to, and that he should pay for his actions with his life. It’s almost frustratin­g that it doesn’t have more to impart than that, but perhaps, that’s all there is.

No MPAA rating

Running time: 1:40

Where to watch: In theaters and on demand Aug. 27

 ?? RLJE FILMS ?? Elijah Wood and Luke Kirby in “No Man of God.”
RLJE FILMS Elijah Wood and Luke Kirby in “No Man of God.”

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