The Denver Post

We’re all trying to find the guy who did this

- By Calum Marsh © The New York Times Co.

Not rated. 92 minutes. On Netflix.

In the simplest terms, “Intrusion” is about a woman who begins to think that her husband may be up to something sinister. The movie makes it immediatel­y obvious, however, that her husband really is up to something sinister, because he’s always prowling around suspicious­ly, with ominous music playing pretty much whenever he’s onscreen. But this is a feature-length thriller, and it needs to buy some time and build suspense, so the faithful wife is obliged to be very, very obtuse and draw some very foolish conclusion­s. It’s an exercise in watching someone have the world’s slowest revelation.

The wife is Meera (Freida Pinto), a cancer survivor and therapist, and the husband is Henry (Logan Marshall-green), an architect who has designed the couple’s modernist dream home in rural Corrales, outside of Albuquerqu­e. After their home is burgled, Meera surmises that they may have been targeted, and seeks answers by investigat­ing Henry’s private life, which is both highly dubious and convenient­ly easy to look into. This is one of those mysteries where both the suspect and the sleuth keep making the kind of implausibl­e, idiotic mistakes that generate trite suspense. Henry leaves evidence lying around with laughable carelessne­ss; Meera roots around his office as he’s right about to walk in the door.

If “Intrusion” has one redeeming feature, it’s Marshall-green, whose performanc­e as the husband with a dark secret has a crackling, tightly controlled intensity far more nuanced and persuasive than anything else in the film. Marshallgr­een was similarly sensationa­l in Karyn Kusama’s excellent thriller “The Invitation,” but the director of “Intrusion,” Adam Salky, squanders the actor’s terrific work. It’s tempting to imagine this material realized with the maniac verve of a film like James Wan’s “Malignant,” where the ridiculous verges on camp, instead of how Salky plays it: thuddingly literal and painfully dumb.

 ?? Ursula Coyote, Netflix ?? Freida Pinto and Logan Marshall-green in “Intrusion.”
Ursula Coyote, Netflix Freida Pinto and Logan Marshall-green in “Intrusion.”

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