City Times

‘Undeniably unsettling’ Aussie cop drama disturbs Cannes

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In two of the most intense performanc­es to grip the Cannes Film Festival, awardwinni­ng actors Joel Edgerton and Sean Harris face off in a dark undercover cop story from Australia.

The Stranger is based on the real-life effort to ensnare a child murderer that takes a terrible toll on the officers charged with ingratiati­ng themselves with the suspect.

Edgerton, known from films such as Loving, The Great Gatsby and TV series The Undergroun­d Railroad, praised the officers who risked their lives and psychologi­cal well-being in the case.

“These are all people that we’ll never get to meet. I don’t even know the real name of the person I’m playing,” he said. “That job has such a weight and takes such a toll,” he said.

His target is played by Sean Harris, who has establishe­d himself as one of the most visceral presences in cinema — from the bad guy in the most recent Mission: Impossible

films to a ruthless killer in The Borgias and his Bafta-winning role in British series Southcliff­e.

Edgerton praised his ability to balance vulnerabil­ity with menace.

“There’s something about Sean... there’s a vibration that’s undeniably unsettling and terrifying and that’s a rare gift,” he said.

Harris credited his year-long preparatio­n for the role for his blistering performanc­e.

“When I got over to Australia, that’s when it started to kick in, the intensity — you turn up the dial. All the work I’d done started to flow through me,” he said.

Director Thomas M Wright, also known as an actor in TV series Top of the Lake, said it was a strange experience presenting such a dark piece of work amid the sunshine, champagne and paparazzi of Cannes.

“It’s almost a schizophre­nic experience,” he said. “You’ve gone to this incredibly personal place to make this, it’s difficult subject matter, it’s left a mark on us. And then we’re at Cannes, which is like a film you’ve been watching your whole life and suddenly you’re in the middle of it.”

Edgerton said it was particular­ly tricky given that the undercover officers must remain anonymous.

“We get to celebrate ourselves by making a fictional version of a story. These guys will never be celebrated,” he said.

The Stranger, which is playing in the festival’s Un Certain Regard section, received a long standing ovation at its premiere on Friday, with critics singling out the central performanc­es.

Wright said he separated Edgerton and Harris — who knew each other from previous films The King and The Green Knight — during filming.

“They were kept completely separate,” Wright said. “I wanted them to conduct their research entirely separately. We can’t actually talk about what that research entailed. We certainly went to some very deep places with the making of this film. It wasn’t a film we just walked away from at the end.” AFP

Australia has a history of bleak but brilliantl­y-made true-crime dramas, from The Snowtown Murders and Nitram, to Animal Kingdom which also starred The Stranger star Joel Edgerton. “We’re in a landscape that was formed through violence and defined by violence. We can’t see it, we don’t understand it,” said director Thomas M Wright. “You look at the great Australian artists... there’s a darkness there. We’re surrounded by an image of sunshine and beaches but it’s a complex country.”

 ?? ?? Joel Edgerton, director Thomas M. Wright, and Sean Harris pose for photograph­ers at the photo call for the film ‘The Stranger’ at the 75th Cannes Film Festival
Joel Edgerton, director Thomas M. Wright, and Sean Harris pose for photograph­ers at the photo call for the film ‘The Stranger’ at the 75th Cannes Film Festival

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