Cath Clarke 

I’ve Seen All I Need to See review – murky indie thriller follows woman home after her sister is murdered

An actor returns after the death of a family member, but there’s not much more of depth in this noirish tale with a painfully pretentious voiceover
  
  

Rosie McDonald and Renee Gagner in I've Seen All I Need to See
Looks pensive without saying much … Rosie McDonald and Renee Gagner in I've Seen All I Need to See. Photograph: Bulldog Film Distribution

Peel back the layers and sadly there is nothing much going on inside this American indie drama from director Zeshaan Younus; it’s a movie that’s aiming for noir, but ends up more of a shade of drab grey. It’s contrived and frustrating, with a painfully pretentious voiceover by its lead character Parker (Renee Gagner). She’s an actor in Los Angeles who returns to her home town after her sister Indiana (Rosie McDonald) is killed. “Sister, you were right.” muses Parker. “I am never fully anything or anyone. Instead, I am practically everyone and everything.”

It’s film in which actors shot in closeup deliver lines looking pensive, with an air of meaning and depth, while not actually saying anything meaningful. Before her death, we watch Indiana brokering some kind of dodgy deal with a biker. She leaves a voicemail for Parker: “I’m in pretty deep out here … If anything happens to me don’t come looking.” Which is advice promptly ignored by her sister after Indiana is killed. Instead, Parker searches for answers, although this is a film with loftier intentions than solving a murder.

In places it feels like a film school project, self-conscious without much thought for the audience. There are echoes of David Lynch, though this has none of the danger or strangeness, despite some murky, atmospheric camerawork by cinematographer Justin Moore.

• I’ve Seen All I Need to See is in UK cinemas from 1 May.

 

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