The Denver Post

A man in dark times and deep trouble

- By Manohla Dargis

Rated R. 99 minutes. On iTunes, Google Play and other platforms.

When Tomaz digs a small figurine out of the rich, dark earth in “Amulet,” he has no sense of the trouble it will bring. Students of the cinematic supernatur­al will know better, given the fantastic objects scattered throughout the horror genre, with its demonic dolls, cursed videotapes and enchanted fetishes. The object here is worn and pale as bone, with breasts and a shelllike disc fanning above its head like a mantilla.

Tomaz (Alec Secareanu) enters, wreathed in mystery and isolated in deep woods. The storybook setting makes a curious fit with his rifle, uniform and the roadblock he guards (sometimes while reading Hannah Arendt’s “On Violence”). My, what big eyes and brain you have, viewers may think, as they wonder where he is and what he’s doing there. Writer-director Romola Garai, though, keeps his background and the larger picture blurred, allowing your imaginatio­n to roam free as the trees rustle and the camera glides. That he’s a soldier without an obvious cause or country only adds to the spooky, anxious vibe.

A malevolent fairy tale about men and women, violence and power (and things that go eek in the night), “Amulet” frays your nerves beautifull­y for its first creepy hour. Working with a crack team both in front of the camera and behind it, Garai teases the story slowly, sprinkling in sharp, resonant details amid wails from a banshee chorus (courtesy of composer Sarah Angliss). When Tomaz takes out a straight razor to shave, the moment sets off Chekhovian-Hitchcocki­an alarms in one wittily economic image. The brandished blade also suggests, simply by associatio­n, that Tomaz has something to do with the abrupt edits and destabiliz­ing narrative fragmentat­ion.

The plot thickens after Tomaz unearths the figurine, which is followed by a shot of him gasping awake as if from a nightmare. Now bearded and living in London, he seems to be a stray, though it’s initially unclear whether this is the present or another period. He flops at what looks like a squat, works in constructi­on and seems wholly adrift, a meander that ends when he meets a solicitous nun,

Sister Claire (Imelda Staunton, in a brief, delicious turn). In short order, she delivers him to one of those creaking, squeaking houses with peeling walls and alarming stains, an apparent damsel in distress, Magda (Carla Juri), and a shrieking enigma inhabiting the top floor.

As Tomaz settles into his odd new digs, Garai regularly cuts to his time in the woods. There, after digging up the amulet, he meets a stranger (Angeliki Papoulia), who takes refuge with him, an arrangemen­t that seems to mirror his relationsh­ip with Magda. Garai shifts back and forth smoothly between these parallel stories, giving each a distinct look and uneasy tone. She has invoked touchstone­s like Jennifer Kent’s claustroph­obic freakout “The Babadook,” and, by extension, she’s also indebted to Roman Polanski and the diabolical Davids, Lynch and Cronenberg. (She also tosses in an albino critter that seems to have flown out of Roberto Bolaño’s novel “Amulet.”)

This is Garai’s feature directing debut, and it is as satisfying as it is promising, despite an unfortunat­e wind down. She has a great eye — and a real feel for the power of silence and visual textures — but she stumbles when she explains too much. An actress-turned-filmmaker whose credits include “Atonement,” Garai is clearly invested in creating juicy, complex gender roles.

 ?? Nick Wall/Magnet Releasing, via © The New York Times Co. ?? Carla Juri and Alec Secareanu in “Amulet,” Romola Garai’s feature directing debut.
Nick Wall/Magnet Releasing, via © The New York Times Co. Carla Juri and Alec Secareanu in “Amulet,” Romola Garai’s feature directing debut.

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