Dir: Daniel Graham. With:
Timothy Spall, Peter Stormare, Matt Hookings, Alicia Agneson. 93 mins. Cert: 15
Having apprenticed in
arthouse distribution, writer-director Daniel Graham has nobly devoted himself
to reviving the aesthetics of once-prominent auteurs deemed unfashionable,
uncommercial or both simultaneously. Graham’s 2017 film Opus Zero
followed in the thematically dense, landscape-attentive footsteps of Theo
Angelopoulos; now this deeply eccentric follow-up tips a plumed hat towards
Peter Greenaway, casting Timothy Spall in what instantly resembles a
post-Brexit update of the Brian Dennehy role in 1987’s The Belly of an
Architect. There’s a lot of vomit, and the film is something of a splurge
itself, pebble-dashing the screen with ideas. Yet its better ones stick:
whether new or regurgitated, the constituent elements are forever intriguing,
even if Graham only partially pulls them together at the last.
Spall is at his most
Hogarthian, making a full three-course meal out of the contradictions of Alfred
Rott, a sharp-suited vulgarian (and self-described “intractable arsehole”)
dispatched to sunkissed Malta to oversee the construction of a new concert
hall. Fired after his employers clock the building’s resemblance to female
genitalia, the architect’s certainties are further tested upon encountering the
eponymous figure, an ailing dandy (Peter Stormare, at his most Stormarean) who
wants Rott to design his final resting place. Graham, likewise, has much on his
mind. This central narrative is interwoven with cutaways to 13th century monks and lepers, while a subplot concerning the Maltese authorities’
efforts to control a malaria outbreak suggests the script was being rewritten
as the pandemic took hold.
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