Los Angeles Times

Alicia Vikander noir fails to lure us in

Wash Westmorela­nd’s ‘Earthquake Bird’ is a psychologi­cal thriller set in Tokyo that pivots on a series of secrets and mystery.

- By Robert Abele

Set in a tremorous Tokyo, the dark psychologi­cal thriller “Earthquake Bird” wants to rattle you with dangerous passion and mystery, yet it’s more of a flightless if colorful creature than anything else.

Not that there aren’t absorbing facets to the Eastlures-West noir setup in which Alicia Vikander’s bilingual expat navigates a murder investigat­ion that points to her. But in his handling of the woolly genre elements, writer-director Wash Westmorela­nd, in adapting British author Susanna Jones’ 2001 novel, is the more regrettabl­y unreliable narrator here than his increasing­ly unmoored heroine.

Vikander plays single, Swedish-born Lucy, a buttoned-up translator and amateur cellist who likes the occasional karaoke night with colleagues and being the only foreigner in an all-female, furisode-attired string quartet but mostly sticks to herself out of a deep-seated belief that a childhood trauma has cursed her.

She neverthele­ss falls for tall, brooding photograph­er Teiji (Naoki Kobayashi), believing their caginess as private individual­s is a point of connection, although we can tell her naturally cautious demeanor is giving way while his opacity retains its secretive coolness.

The wrinkle comes when Lucy befriends flirtatiou­s, culturally naive American expat Lily (Riley Keough), and before long Lucy sees herself as the possible victim in a scenario of romantic betrayal, one with sinister implicatio­ns.

But as the story wends its way through paranoia, snooping, hallucinat­ions and even flashes of ghostlines­s, “Earthquake Bird” never takes hold as either a true mystery (despite the flashback structure triggered by Lucy’s initial questionin­g by detectives) or a character study in the fragile nature of self-alienation.

As an unsettled protagonis­t commanding the elegant, textured visuals framed by frequent Park Chan Wook cinematogr­apher Chung-hoon Chung, Vikander is an alluring enigma with her hypnotic eyes and throaty purr. It doesn’t make Lucy a captivatin­g f lesh-and-blood character, however.

Try as he might, Westmorela­nd can’t muster the same portraitur­e skills with a woman of mystery and brokenness that he’s shown with bold, expressive types (“Still Alice,” “Colette”). That applies to Keough too, who has a few moments worthy of her character’s suspicious friendline­ss, but it’s not enough to sell a tension-filled threesome when the third cryptic element is Kobayashi’s flat turn.

The most discordant element in “Earthquake Bird” is the aggressive­ly atmospheri­c, pulsating score (by Atticus Ross, Leopold Ross and Claudia Sarne), frequently juiced to pounding levels as a suspense crutch. That’s the surest sign what we’re watching is more of an insecure potboiler than something distinctiv­ely, stylishly unexpected.

 ?? Netf lix ?? ALICIA VIKANDER stars in “Earthquake Bird,” a thriller-mystery film about a love triangle between two Westerners and a Japanese photograph­er in Tokyo.
Netf lix ALICIA VIKANDER stars in “Earthquake Bird,” a thriller-mystery film about a love triangle between two Westerners and a Japanese photograph­er in Tokyo.

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