Directed by JUSTINE TRIET
Starring SANDRA HÜLLER, SAMUEL THEIS, SWANN ARLAUD
Released 10 NOVEMBER
nyone who caught Justine Triet’s delicious 2019 film ahead of the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, scooped the Palme d’Or. This is Hitchcockian hokum of the absolute grandest , a throwback murder mystery whose immaculately precise plotting coalesces into a existential conundrum which asks: if a person murders another person and there was no-one around to see them do it, did it actually happen? German actor Sandra Hüller adds to the case that she’s one of the finest to ever do it, playing slippery Sandra, a commercially successful author who is arrested on suspicion of murder when her commercially unsuccessful author husband Samuel (Samuel Thies) plummets from the balcony of their grandiose pine chalet. Triet and Hüller conspire to not give the audience an inch when it comes to the question of Sandra’s culpability, and this is done via the clever, naturalistic writing and a performance which cleaves to realism even when the material attempts to drag it in other, more lurid directions. At the centre of it all is the couple’s partially-blind son, Daniel (Milo Machado-Graner) who has to suffer the ignominy of discovering his parents’ marital problems in court. It’s confident, classical filmmaking, yet despite its many formal and thematic pleasures, doesn’t offer a whole lot that’s new.