Los Angeles Times

Woman’s courage anchors drama

- — Sheri Linden

A night that begins with the fizzy high of a new flirtation turns into a labyrinthi­ne plunge through hell in “Beauty and the Dogs.” At the center of the gut-churning story, set in post-revolution Tunisia, is the off-screen rape of a college student by policemen — and the Catch-22 that requires her to report the crime to the police before she can receive medical attention, let alone justice.

As the traumatize­d Mariam, the terrific Mariam Al Ferjani is fully attuned to her brutal awakening. Compared with the political dissident (Ghanem Zrelli) who sparks her attention at a party, she’s a wide-eyed provincial. The skimpy dress she reluctantl­y borrows that night becomes a curse that brands her, and writer-director Kaouther Ben Hania wisely never lets us look away from her emotional and physical exposure.

Ben Hania tells the agonizing story in nine chapters, each a single, uninterrup­ted shot. Her stylistic choices — the fluid camerawork, the heightened palette edging from dream to nightmare — initially intensify the drama. Yet as Mariam careens between hospitals and police stations, facing indifferen­ce and misogyny, the movie’s fever pitch begins to feel at odds with its artistry.

Chilling Kafkaesque encounters give way to portrayals of thuggish cops bordering on caricature. In distractin­gly blunt ways, the film emphasizes what’s already powerfully clear: the monstrousn­ess of Mariam’s situation and her courage. “Beauty and the Dogs.” In Arabic with English subtitles. Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes. Playing: Landmark Nuart, West Los Angeles.

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