‘Heel’ review: This isn’t your everyday family of kidnappers
The movie is called βHeelβ and its frenetic opening β a flash-cut glimpse of young, handsome, swaggeringly cruel Tommy (Anson Boon) in drug-fueled party mode β seems enough to explain the title. The next time we see him, though, heβs neck-shackled in the basement of a remote English estate. What follows in Polish filmmaker Jan Komasaβs blackly comic, unnerving thriller is clearly meant to evoke βHeelβsβ more obedience-minded reading.
And who would be harshing this hooliganβs buzz with a case of reform-minded abduction? An eerily isolated, rules-driven nuclear family: mild-mannered, soft-spoken Chris (Stephen Graham), haunted Catherine (Andrea Riseborough) and polite son Jonathan (Kit Rakusen). They all may as well have sprung from the combined neo-gothic conjurings of Edward Gorey and Harold Pinter. Under Komasaβs direction, the mix of fractured fable and terroristic morality play in Bartek Bartosikβs screenplay is absurd but potent, giving βHeelβ enough psychologically twisted juju to nearly always feel like more than the sum of its parts.
Our first glimpse of Tommy chained up, pleading to be let go, is through the eyes of a young Macedonian refugee, Katrina (Monika Frajczyk), being given a tour of the large countryside manor where sheβs just been hired by Chris for twice-a-week housework. Katrina, like us, is rightly horrified but sheβs in her own bind: undocumented, saved by Chris from the streets, with her signature on a confidentiality agreement and a deportation threat hanging over her. Sheβs hardly in a position to do much more than accept whatβs going on as a grimmer version of her own dead-end predicament.
And yet whatβs readily apparent is that this weird, fragile, insular family is genuinely keen on folding Tommy into their lives. Theyβre also convinced of their unorthodox methods, which hinge on reinforcement and reward. Tommy seems receptive, too, with each invitation to participate in his abductorsβ togetherness (meals, movie nights, a picnic). This is when βHeelβ is at its most alluringly queasy, a dark commentary on all families as institutions inherently built on confinement and emotional blackmail. (Itβs no coincidence one of the movieβs executive producers is Jerzy Skolimowski, who made his own pointed kidnapping allegory with βMoonlighting.β)
Everyoneβs broken, so the collective strength of the cast in keeping us on our toes about where this is all headed is a huge plus. The wiry Boon doles out his brash characterβs reserves of vulnerability to stunning effect β Tommy is a difficult part and Boon knows how to make it revealing and suspenseful. Grahamβs tweaked, sensitive patriarch is tantalizingly far from the heartbreaking dad of βAdolescenceβ and the gloriously oddball Riseborough makes the most of her faint-voiced momβs severity. Frajczyk and Rakusen are also pitch-perfect.
Last year Komasa had another family-centered thriller with βAnniversary,β a movie about politics corrupting a happy home. But we know that equation already. βHeelβ is Tolstoyβs happy-family maxim cooked in a mad scientistβs lab. While it sometimes shows its seams as an idea movie, its elegant disturbia has a boldness, recalling that great mind-game β60s era that gave us βTheServant,β βThe Collector,β and the early psychological freak-outs of Komasaβs countryman, Roman Polanski.
‘Heel’
Not rated
Running time: 1 hour, 50 minutes
Playing: Opens Friday, March 6 at Laemmle NoHo 7