There is no getting around the horrors of the event that 'Nitram' prepares the viewer for, but thankfully does not actually depict. Instead it creates a portrait, in fact a series of portraits of not only the notorious killer responsible for the Port Arthur massacre of 1996, but the key figures in his life.
I appreciate that the movie has received equal plaudits as well as disdain and displeasure at its very existence, but as a drama, it is a powerful one, and even 25 years on, this deep wound in the Australian psyche is evident in the way that understandably some folks have protested that it was made at all.
Casting Caleb Landry Jones in the title role was a very smart move, as he has started to make a name for himself in a short space of time and prolifically played outsiders and mostly unsavory young men. He gets to really deep dive into menace and dysfunction here and the film is cleverly shot and edited to add to that atmosphere of building tension and a foreshadowing of horror. He won the Best Actor at Cannes for this, but I sense that other award bodies may not be so generous, as this is an intensely unflattering and unsettling performance, but nevertheless intense and indelible.
It is always an occasion to watch Judy Davis, and here, the veteran actor shows why she is simply one of the world's finest; here playing the mother to the title character and giving a performance of such complexity and of some deeply disturbing elements and I don't doubt that Ms Davis will receive an AACTA nomination for the performance. Another Davis - Essie Davis (no relation) is also quite spellbinding here for different reasons as a quirky and somewhat broken individual who forms a monkey grip of a relationship with Nitram. Both eminent actresses help to show other sides to the psyche of the main character, but are that good, they offer fully formed portraits in their own right. Anthony LaPaglia as the father is also very good, and a few key scenes are also awards worthy, and are some of the most disturbing scenes in the film. The performances will not be forgotten in a hurry.
There is not a lot of new content here, as there have been many movies made chronicling the pathway of a psychotic person's road to murder, but this one, set in the picturesque innocence of an Australian town is made more cogent by that shattering of the idyllic setting, and how gun laws or lack thereof facilitated this heinous crime. Justin Kurzel the Director has made a career of portraying such horrors and whilst it is not my regular cinematic 'cup of tea' I had to view this as an essential piece of Aussie filmmaking and the chance to see some of the best in the industry tell a story, that in all honesty, we don't really want to see, nor see again into the future. The film I believe is wanting to be part of that wish that Australia never has to have its national psyche shellshocked again.