A very beautiful film with a strong atmosphere and a measured rhythm, where a policeman infiltrates a community of thugs to track down a child killer. Joel Edgerton is this policeman, who lives in permanent stress, illustrated with his scenes of his family life, that is to say with his son, of whom he has the custody from time to time. But undercover cop and father life are not easy. The one he tracks is Sean Harris, in a subtle interpretation, to draw a character on which it is hard to have a psychological grip. The plot and the script work perfectly the subject: during the whole film, we wonder if he is the killer wanted for these murders of children. The last quarter will give us the explanations.
Thomas M. Wright signs a film that has its own rhythm, its dense climates (settings, photography, music), far from any narrative and technical hysteria. He takes his time to film the sequences over time.
The film is carried by its two main actors, in interpretations all in subtlety, by small touches, their characters always remaining mysterious, and maintaining the interest of the spectator and the curiosity for the continuation. The spectator is constantly wondering how the story will evolve. The work of Joel Edgerton and Sean Harris makes us perceive a constant tension. Their characters seem always ready to cross the limit, and provoke a permanent tension on the whole film.
Superb exercise of style.