The Guardian (USA)

Control review: Kevin Spacey’s sarky GPS wants to kill the Home Secretary for sleeping with the PM

- Peter Bradshaw

Kevin Spacey’s redemptive journey of uncancelli­ng steps another millimetre forwards, or sideways, with his somewhat bizarre new role in this lowbudget British indie in which, as a disembodie­d voice, he plays the implacable punisher of other people’s sexual misdemeano­urs.It’s actually a decent idea for a single location catand-mouse thriller set in a car – similar to, actually maybe better than the idea behind the recent Liam Neeson thriller Retributio­n. And it was a smart entreprene­urial idea to create a role which Spacey could convenient­ly record in a studio anywhere in the world. Spacey’s silky, sulky voice saves the film from disaster, just slightly, although there’s nothing he can do about the terribly clunky direction and torpid line-readings from other people.

We are apparently in a future world where tech and AI have made great strides. A besuited man described by other characters as the “British Prime Minister David Addams” gives a speech in a weirdly inexpensiv­e looking function room to a group of people who look as if they have just appeared in The Office Christmas Special. His theme is the overwhelmi­ng importance of privacy and afterwards with some bafflingly indiscreet and explicit dialogue makes it very clear to anyone within earshot that he is having a passionate affair with someone described as “the Home Secretary” – whose name is Stella Simmons.

David has to stay late at this oddly low-rent-looking function and Stella agrees to drive his very sleepy teen daughter home in her state-of-the-art driverless car. But part way into the journey the car starts going where the Home Secretary doesn’t want it to go. In a panic, she realises she can’t control it. She has lost control of her car and her life. And then the unmistakab­le voice of her online tormentor, Kevin Spacey, is heard - jeering and taunting and sometimes going into a spoof cocker-ney azz-yer-father accent. He sounds sarcastic and slightly despairing. And in this film he has a lot to be sarcastic and

slightly despairing about. But who is he? And what does he want? Apart from to appear in films again?Actually this isn’t the first time Spacey has played a creepy voice – he did it in Duncan Jones’s sci-fi Moon in 2010, playing the voice of the HAL-ish spaceship computer which has a sinister mind of its own. But in that film there turned out to be quite a bit more going on.Perhaps Control will gain cult status – or inspire a remake. But Spacey’s eerily detached, jaded presence does not do much for his putative comeback.

 ?? Simmons in Control. Photograph: YouTube ?? ‘She has lost control of her car – and her life’ … Lauren Metcalfe as Home Secretary Stella
Simmons in Control. Photograph: YouTube ‘She has lost control of her car – and her life’ … Lauren Metcalfe as Home Secretary Stella

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