Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

DEATH WARRED OVER

Which sibling will die? It’s up to them in clever psychologi­cal thriller ‘Humane’

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

Just last week we had the release of “Abigail,” which had a group of shady characters trapped in a secluded mansion with their hostage, who turns out to be the daughter of Dracula, whoops. Now comes “Humane,” with a group of shady characters trapped in a secluded mansion and facing off against an equally dangerous and at times even more terrifying force:

Their fellow siblings.

Given that the director of “Humane” is Caitlin Cronenberg, sister of Brandon Cronenberg (“Infinity Pool”) and daughter of David Cronenberg (“Scanners,” “The Fly,” et al.), one might expect this to be a blood-soaked body horror film, and there are some delightful­ly squeamish scenes — but this is primarily a psychologi­cal thriller, an update/variation on “The Fall of the House of Usher.”

“Humane” is set in a near future in which a terrible global ecological event has resulted in an emergency food shortage and has prompted government­s to enact emergency measures designed to reduce the world’s population by 20%, and by “reduce,” we mean one in five adults has to go. If you enlist in the government’s euthanasia program, you’ll be hailed as a hero, and your surviving family members will be awarded a life-changing pile of cash.

With a clever script by Michael Sparaga paving the way over a running time of just over an hour and a half, “Humane” is set on the grounds of the cavernous and remote estate of the York family patriarch, Charles (Peter Gallagher), a famed and powerful news anchor who has recently retired. Charles shares the home with his most recent wife, Dawn (Uni Park), who doesn’t say much and has an almost menacing way of preparing a lavish dinner.

Charles has invited his four grown children, who all resent Charles and who barely keep in touch with one another, for dinner. The quartet includes Jay Baruchel’s Jared, who has become a paid shill for the government and is a ubiquitous presence on TV, touting the benefits of enlisting; Emily Hampshire’s Rachel, a cold and bluntspeak­ing pharma executive, who has brought along her young daughter, Mia (Sirena Gulamgaus), even though Charles specified the dinner should be for the adult family members only; youngest sister Ashley (Alanna Bale), an aspiring actress whose career is going nowhere fast, and the adopted Noah (Sebastian Chacon), a recovering addict who bears a facial scar and perhaps even more troubling emotional scars. Fine performanc­es by all.

After the family trades a few opening barbs and insults, Charles makes the big announceme­nt: He and Dawn have enlisted, and in fact this will be their last night together, as the Department of Citizen Strategy (DCS) is about to arrive to euthanize Charles and Dawn. (It’s not as if the family needs the money, but Charles has his reasons.) The siblings are still processing this insane news when Dawn has a change of heart and runs off, and that’s very bad news for the rest of the group, because the law mandates that once two family members have signed off on an enlistment, the DCS ain’t leaving until they’ve got two bodies.

Enter Enrico Colantoni’s Bob as a DCS agent who truly relishes his work, and it’s no hyperbole to say Colantoni takes over the movie every time he’s onscreen with his entertaini­ng portrayal of the disarmingl­y cheerful and quite scary Bob, who uses terms such as “cadaver procuremen­t” as he casually explains to the siblings that they have two hours to decide which of them is going to take Dawn’s place. In the meantime, Bob will be just outside in his trailer, keeping watch over young Mia as a kind of collateral. If the family doesn’t produce a body when those 120 minutes are up, Bob and his heavily armed henchmen will make the decision for them. (The conversati­ons between Bob and Mia in that trailer are something else. Great dialogue, and Colantoni and young Sirena Gulamgaus are terrific together.)

How’s that for your warped and weird predicamen­t? We learn more about the darkness inside each of the four siblings as they play the ultimate game of Survivor — forming alliances, betraying those alliances, physically attacking one another. The knives are out, in more ways than one. We don’t completely buy every late twist and turn, but “Humane” keeps us in its throes to the end.

 ?? ?? ABOVE: Jay Baruchel (from left), Emily Hampshire and Alanna Bale play siblings forced to decide which family member will be euthanized in “Humane.”
ABOVE: Jay Baruchel (from left), Emily Hampshire and Alanna Bale play siblings forced to decide which family member will be euthanized in “Humane.”
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 ?? IFC FILMS PHOTOS ?? LEFT: Enrico Colantoni plays a cheery government agent charged with putting down human volunteers.
IFC FILMS PHOTOS LEFT: Enrico Colantoni plays a cheery government agent charged with putting down human volunteers.

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