Midnight Special, film review: Frustrating and fascinating plot draws you in

(12A) Jeff Nichols, 112 mins, starring: Michael Shannon, Kirsten Dunst, Jaeden Lieberher, Adam Driver

Geoffrey Macnab
Wednesday 06 April 2016 18:52 BST
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The film treats outlandish subject matter in a matter of fact fashion
The film treats outlandish subject matter in a matter of fact fashion (© Ben Rothstein/Warner Bros)

Midnight Special is an eerie and shape-shifting film, pitched between thriller about child abduction, study of a religious cult, family drama and Close Encounters-style sci-fi yarn. Writer director Jeff Nichols deliberately keeps the storytelling opaque. That's what makes the film frustrating but also ever more fascinating.

Michael Shannon plays Ray, the father who takes his eight year old son Alton (Lieberher) on the run. Everyone is after them - FBI analysts (Adam Driver in a very different groove from Star Wars), the NSA, cops, the members of the strange cult where Sam Shepard is the preacher. The boy has uncanny powers but is very frail.

Nichols' trick is to treat outlandish subject matter in matter of fact fashion. Much of the action here takes place in motel rooms or garage forecourts. Shannon plays Ray in intense but restrained fashion, as a father desperate to protect his son. This is a film that draws you in even as it perplexes you and that ultimately has a very strong emotional kick.

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