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‘In Camera’ Review: An Actor Fails One Audition After Another — But Finds a Part — In an Acidly Funny Industry Satire
‘In Camera’ Review: An Actor Fails One Audition After Another — But Finds a Part — In an Acidly Funny Industry Satire
turnover time:2024-06-28 01:10:33

‘In Camera’ Review: An Actor Fails One Audition After Another — But Finds a Part — In an Acidly Funny Industry Satire1

The thing Aden likes about acting, he tells someone who cares enough to ask, is how organized it is. You know where you stand, quite literally, because someone tells you; youre given things to say, and told how to say them. Order and certainty arent typically seen as benefits of the thespian calling, and even Aden doesnt sound entirely convinced of his own words. But then Aden played, in a performance of brilliant, diamantine versatility, by Nabhaan Rizwan is never entirely convinced of himself, period, when he hasnt a script to follow or a character to inhabit. A simultaneously playful and savagely pointed satire from first-time feature director Naqqash Khalid, In Camera traces how its young British-Asian protagonists sense of identity is progressively diminished by the cynicism and tokenism of the industry hes trying to crack though as it turns out, when you lose yourself entirely, all is not lost.

Self-reflexive satirical filmmaking of this nature is relatively rare on the British independent scene perhaps, in part, because financing and producing features at all is such a strenuous endeavor that artists are loath to bite any of the various hands feeding them. In Camera is notable as a debut for the gutsy, darkly hilarious accuracy of its take on an industry where people of color are still patronized as interchangeable quota-fillers, and where notions of authenticity are commodified to the extent that they become entirely imitative poses. But its also notable as a debut, straight up: As formally vital as it is thematically ambitious, Khalids film kicks off what will surely be a busy festival tour in Karlovy Varys Proxima competition, while discerning distributors should be drawn to its gleaming technique and topical resonance.

It opens on a gaudily lit crime scene, as hardened detectives mutter familiar clichs over a dead body barely maintaining the illusion of reality ahead of the reveal that were actually on the set of a middling police procedural series. Between takes, the disgruntled lead (Aston McAuley) fumes over the phone to his agent, desperate to exit the show; the murder victim, T-shirt streaked with fake blood, offers him a fannish compliment, getting a brusque Yeah, sure in response. The first of several unexpected pivots is that its this barely-noted extra, not the star, that we follow off the set: This is Aden, and while an incidental corpse isnt much of a role, its at least one that hes managed to book.

For the rest, his career is largely made up of unsuccessful auditions, his days spent lined up with British-Asian actors who look superficially like him, as they repeatedly vie for the limited roles available to men with their skin colour: Getting to play a generic Middle Eastern terrorist is one of the more plum opportunities. (Filmmakers get likewise boxed and branded according to race: Khalid winkingly namechecks himself as the director of a hot project, though an actors agent only recalls him as whatever, the Asian dude.) To make up the rent for the spartan apartment he shares with distracted doctor roommate Bo (Rory Fleck Byrne), Aden has to get creative, acting as a bereaved womans dead son in a therapy project that goes gradually haywire.

Its a device borrowed from Yorgos Lanthimoss Alps, which is some clue as to the prickly, perverse narrative games Khalid is playing here. There are glinting reflections of such wily British experimenters as Nicolas Roeg and Peter Strickland, too, in his filmmaking, though little feels derivative here: Theres a confident starkness to DP Tasha Backs compositions, which bear the hard gloss of a world Aden cant quite penetrate, and to Paul Davies rich sound design, which amplifies even a pin piercing a shirt collar to a forbiddingly alien degree.

At a script level, In Camera perhaps has an excess of enticing ideas, some given more breathing room than others. In particular, an oblique subplot involving Bos own absent search for personhood feels unrealized both on its own terms and as a complement to Adens serpentine story which is more successfully activated when he and Bo take on a third roommate. Played by a superb Amir El-Masry, capturing just the right balance between jockish and preening, vacuous menswear stylist Conrad is as loudly self-regarding as Aden is quietly, intently watchful with a life that the young actor begins to believe he could play rather well.

Conrad affects a cultural kinship with Aden, bluffly insisting that its their time to seize the spotlight; his words ring as hollow as the buzzword-heavy claims of various casting directors and photographers to be all about diversity and real people. That cuts no ice with our protagonist, whos never more comfortable than as a fake person: The void at the core of Rizwans stunningly limber portrayal, as Aden effortlessly slips between characters and stalls when playing himself, is whats most compelling. Its a passive-aggressive tour de force that ought to put the star, hitherto best known for secondary roles in Mogul Mowgli and TVs Station Eleven, at the top of more casting directors lists. Still, In Cameras satire strikes a dry cautionary note about the perils of a raised profile.

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