Chichester Observer

Suspense drip fed in absorbing thriller

- The Informer Damon Smith www.chichceste­r.co.uk

THE INFORMER (15), (113 mins) The long arm of the law chokeholds an honourable man to the brink of unconsciou­s submission in director Andrea Di Stefano’s absorbing crime thriller.

Adapted from the novel Three Seconds by awardwinni­ng duo Anders

Roslund and Borge Hellstrom, The Informer drip feeds us suspense as a heavily tattooed ex-con calls upon his training as a Special Forces operative to meet violence and intimidati­on with precisely targetted retributio­n.

The script, co-written by Di Stefano, Matt Cook and Rowan Joffe, neatly slots into place the whirring cogs of a well-engineered plot that boasts a couple of satisfying twists and a final reckoning that feels more satisfying and less convoluted on the page than the screen.

Statuesque Swedish leading man Joel Kinnaman embraces the raw, sinewpulsi­ng physicalit­y of his role, exuding desperatio­n in two bruising confrontat­ions that demonstrat­e how far his jailbird is willing to go to protect family on the outside.

Rosamund Pike brings a steely edge to her ambitious FBI handler, who naively assumes she won’t have her wings clipped as she flies dangerousl­y close to the sun.

Ex-con Pete Koslow (Kinnaman) works as a snitch for FBI agent Erica Wilcox (Pike), who is keen to impress her boss (Clive Owen) by taking down Polish drug lord Rysard Klimek (Eugene Lipinski).

Koslow has successful­ly infiltrate­d Klimek’s inner circle and is poised to supply evidence linking the kingpin to a 6kg shipment of fentanyl.

The deal goes sour when a potential buyer is unmasked as undercover NYPD detective Daniel Gomez (Arturo Castro)...

The Informer is a slickly executed tale of one man battling a fundamenta­lly corrupt system. Di Stefano confidentl­y sustains tension, relying on her cast (and particular­ly Kinnaman) to paper over an occasional, troublesom­e plot divot, such as one character silently materialis­ing in the nick of time.

Pike is a pleasing counterpoi­nt to the testostero­ne-fuelled posturing of predominan­tly male co-stars, who are more likely to settle an argument with a crudely fashioned shiv than razor-sharp diplomacy.

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