A young student in Brussels moonlighting as a locksmith finds himself in a desperate bid to survive the night when a routine job puts him in the crosshairs of a vicious mobster in writer/director Michiel Blanchart’s adrenaline-fueled feature debut Night Call. Blanchart’s stylized action-thriller maintains a propulsive pace, rendering a bad work day into a harrowing […]
A young student in Brussels moonlighting as a locksmith finds himself in a desperate bid to survive the night when a routine job puts him in the crosshairs of a vicious mobster in writer/director Michiel Blanchart’s adrenaline-fueled feature debut Night Call. Blanchart’s stylized action-thriller maintains a propulsive pace, rendering a bad work day into a harrowing bid to evade death, with a few overt nods to horror along the white knuckle journey. While it adheres to a familiar formula and its tumultuous Black Lives Matter protests backdrop feels more of a narrative crutch than meaningful, its winsome lead, kinetic staging, and palpable stakes ensure a gripping watch.
It’s clear from the moment he’s introduced that Mady (Jonathan Feltre) is a pure-hearted, trusting soul just trying to make it through his shift. He’s also exhausted. It’s why Mady doesn’t suspect that the woman, Claire (Natacha Krief), who’s been locked out of her apartment, might be lying about whether she actually lives there. He overlooks the signs that something is deeply amiss, including Claire’s promises to run to the ATM so she can pay him for his work while he waits there. It’s while Mady waits for her that the apartment’s true tenant arrives. A fight to the death ensues, but Mady’s bad night will only get worse as he’s captured by ruthless crime boss Yannick (Romain Duris) and tasked with retrieving what Claire took from him under the supervision of right-hand man Theo (