The plot, then: Carrey plays Detective Tadek, a Krakow cop whose card has been marked by some (at first) unspecified misdemeanour in the role. he has a year left until he retires, so when he has his interest in a cold case rekindled, he hopes that successfully solving it will grant him his reputation back. It all seems too good to be true: a local crime novelist, Kozlow, in describing a murder which took place in a now closed sex club called The Cage (from the opening scenes), seems to know a suspicious amount about how the victim’s body was found. Kozlow gets picked up and Tadek is utterly certain he’s got his man, but events conspire to make it all seem a lot less clear cut than that.
The film’s bleak, austere and colourless appearance puts me in mind of some of the best of the ‘Scandi-Noir’ TV series of the last ten years – The Bridge, The Killing and so on. An Eastern European rendition of this kind of thing has real potential. The resemblance is really only aesthetic, though, as whilst these series are masters at engineering plot twists, there’s really only one plot twist in Dark Crimes, which you will no doubt see a mile away. In essence, there’s very little plot to go around here, and although it has the modest running time of ninety minutes, very little happens to fill that time. The film’s stand-out feature is that it’s a series of contradictions. For instance, it’s all delivered in an oddly staccato way, with lots of edits and cuts to different locations and scenes, though for all that, Dark Crimes feels very slow and ponderous throughout. Another contradiction comes with the dialogue; this is a very dialogue-averse film, with minimal exchanges between characters – but then, where it tries to be provocative, it drops a long list of I’m sure completely unintentional clangers, especially where the cartoonish villain Kozlow is concerned. His language is meant to be coarse and uncompromising; in effect, it comes out like someone using swearwords for the very first time.
I can’t speak to the quality of the 2008 article which was the inspiration for the film, but I can say that Dark Crimes is almost bewilderingly bad, and an unfortunate, unexpected black mark against the names of the actors involved, all of whom I hope have sacked their agents since then. If director Alexandros Avranas somehow hoped that an unadorned filming style and a few former Eastern bloc locations would provide enough atmosphere to blind us to the scanty plot and flat performances, well – he’d be wrong on that front. This film is simply deadly, deadly dull.
Dark Crimes will be released on the 9th July 2018 by Signature Entertainment.