‘Relay’ review: Riz Ahmed helps people disappear in smart, paranoid thriller

‘Relay’ review: Riz Ahmed helps people disappear in smart, paranoid thriller


If history has taught us anything, itโ€™s that no one is truly safe. That gathering dread fueled some great โ€™70s paranoid thrillers, such as โ€œThe Parallax Viewโ€ and โ€œThe Conversation,โ€ but itโ€™s been difficult to replicate that eeriness in todayโ€™s extremely online world, when our devices explain and obfuscate with abandon, conspiracies are lifeblood and we feel persecuted one day, invincibly anonymous the next.

The nifty premise of โ€œRelay,โ€ a new white-knuckle ride from โ€œHell or High Waterโ€ director David Mackenzie, is that a certain type of tech-savvy hero can, if not completely ease your anxiety, at least navigate a secret truce with those out to get you. And Riz Ahmedโ€™s solitary off-the-grid fixer, Ash, who hides in plain sight in bustling New York, can do it without ever meeting or talking to you: His preferred mode of traceless communication is the text-telephone service that hard-of-hearing people use in conjunction with message-relaying operators. Like a ready-made covert operation, it keeps identities, numbers and call logs secret.

For the simple fact that โ€œRelayโ€ is not about an assassin (the moviesโ€™ most over-romanticized independent contractor), screenwriter Justin Piaseckiโ€™s scenario deserves kudos. Rather, Ashโ€™s broker helps potential whistleblowers escape the clutches of dangerously far-reaching entities โ€” unless, of course, they want to settle for cash. Itโ€™s a fascinatingly cynical update: Should we make an uneasy peace with our tormentors? (Hello, todayโ€™s headlines.)

Before those questions get their due, however, โ€œRelayโ€ sets itself up with clockwork precision as a straightforward big-city nail-biter about staying one step ahead. Seeking protection from harassment and a return to normal life, rattled biotech scientist Sarah (Lily James) goes on the run with incriminating documents about her former employer. When sheโ€™s rebuffed by a high-powered law firm, sheโ€™s provided a mysterious number to call. Ash, armed with his elaborate vetting methods, puts Sarah through the paces with rules and instructions regarding burner phones, mailed packages and a detailed itinerary of seemingly random air travel. It doesnโ€™t just test her commitment, though โ€” itโ€™s also a ploy to scope out the corporate goons on her trail: a dogged surveillance team led by Sam Worthington (who should maybe only play bad guys) and Willa Fitzgerald.

As the story careens through airports and post offices and New Yorkโ€™s hidey-holes, the cat-and-mouse chase is dizzyingly enjoyable, worthy of a Thomas Perry novel. We wait for the missteps that threaten everything, of course, and they begin with learning that Ash is a failed whistleblower himself, one who is beginning to question his chosen crusade. Another vulnerability, recognizable in the occasional cracks in Ahmedโ€™s commanding stoicism, is the loneliness of the gig. So when a restive Sarah, on one of their protected calls, gently prods for a smidgen of personality from her mysterious unseen helper, one is inclined to shout, โ€œNo feelings! Too risky!โ€

But that, of course, is the slippery pleasure of โ€œRelay,โ€ which pits individuals against venal institutional might. Flaws are the beating hearts of these movies, triggering the peril that makes the blood pump faster. Some of that effectiveness is undercut by some off-putting music choices, but McKenzieโ€™s command of the material is rock solid, Giles Nuttgensโ€™ cinematography achieves a sleek, moody metallic chill and Matt Mayerโ€™s editing is always fleet. In a year thatโ€™s already given us one superlative case of adult peekaboo โ€” Steven Soderberghโ€™s โ€œBlack Bagโ€ โ€” โ€œRelayโ€ proves thereโ€™s still more room for smart, punchy cloak-and-dagger options.

‘Relay’

Rated: R, for language

Running time: 1 hour, 52 minutes

Playing: Opens in wide release Friday, Aug. 22

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