The Guardian (USA)

The Killing of Kenneth Chamberlai­n review – tense reconstruc­tion of fatal police encounter

- Leslie Felperin

The first word that would pop into your brain to describe this drama, based on actual events, is “timely”. But, tragically, that means little given the regularity with which people die at the hands of US police, either by accident or design. The killing at the centre of director David Midell’s almost unbearably tense film happened in White Plains, NY, in 2011. However, as there are only audio recordings, forensic reports and witness statements to document what happened, Chamberlai­n’s death didn’t capture the public imaginatio­n in the same way that George Floyd’s or Breonna Taylor’s did in 2020, for example.

Viewers might care to discuss the difference between such cases’ circumstan­ces and the times in which they happened, but one of the film’s more audacious qualities is that it just leaves such debate to us, choosing to simply depict the events as gathered from investigat­ors and witnesses. It’s probably best absorbed by knowing as little about the story as possible, other than that Chamberlai­n (played with exceptiona­l skill by Frankie Faison) was a 68-year-old African American former marine with a heart condition and mental health issues. Chamberlai­n accidental­ly pressed his health alarm in the middle of the night, which set in motion a fatal encounter with police.

There’s a bit of text at the end that fills in a little of the story’s background and outcome, but the drama cleaves entirely to staging a faithful reconstruc­tion of the events, practicall­y in real time. It’s almost like an American true-crime version of The Death of Mr Lazarescu, Cristi Puiu’s canonical contributi­on to the Romanian new wave, but with a suspense-building musical underscore. Playing policemen with their own contrastin­g approaches to the situation, Steve O’Connell and Enrico Natale offer sturdy support to Faison’s indelible, wrenching, but entirely unsentimen­tal star turn.

• The Killing of Kenneth Chamberlai­n is available on 9 May on digital platforms.

 ?? Photograph: Signature Entertainm­ent ?? Indelible but entirely unsentimen­tal star turn … Frankie Faison as Kenneth Chamberlai­n.
Photograph: Signature Entertainm­ent Indelible but entirely unsentimen­tal star turn … Frankie Faison as Kenneth Chamberlai­n.

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