Review by
        Eric Hillis
  Directed by: Adilkhan Yerzhanov
  Starring: Daniyar Alshinov, Dinara Baktybayeva, Teoman Khos
    
  If Borat sullied the global image of the nation of
    Kazakhstan, director Adilkhan Yerzhanov isn't doing his
    country's tourist board any favours with his latest feature, crooked cop
    thriller A Dark, Dark Man. Here, rural Kazakhstan is portrayed as a lawless frontier where murders
    are routinely covered up by cops on the payroll of violent mobsters, where
    suspects are beaten into confessions just so a cop can clock out on time.
    But like any good western, the human horrors play out against a stunning
    natural backdrop.

  The opening sequence sets the scene for what's to follow as a cop bribes a
    mentally challenged man, Pekuar (Teoman Khos), for his semen,
    which he then smears onto the corpse of a young boy. Pekuar is taken into
    custody by young but world weary detective Bekzat (Daniar Alshinov, a
    Kazakh Brad Pitt). At the behest of a local gangster, the plan is for Bekzat
    to murder Pekuar and make it look like a suicide, but a spanner is thrown in
    the works in the form of Ariana (Dinara Baktybaeva), a big city
    journalist who has been assigned to shadow Bekzat in the investigation he
    never had any intentions of undertaking.

  Yerzhanov's premise is so high concept that it's amazing it hasn't been
    employed before. The closest I can think of are movies like
    Best Seller and Man Bites Dog, but the difference here is that the reporter tailing Bekzat has no idea
    of the atrocities he's committing under her nose. Much of the film's inky
    black comedy arises from how casual Bekzat is in flaunting his position as a
    guardian of the peace. He bribes, beats up and even flat out murders
    witnesses while Ariana is just around the corner or waiting in the car
    outside. When she brings up uncomfortable questions about why so many
    suspects have apparently taken their own lives while in his custody, he has
    a well rehearsed line of bullshit to placate her with.
  Imagine the bastard love child of S. Craig Zahler and Nuri Bilge Ceylan,
    and you'll have an idea of the distinctively dark delights of
    A Dark, Dark Man. As with Ceylan's films, Yerzhanov's consists largely of a series of
    encounters in rooms between Bekzat and the various people who are
    threatening to ruin his day. From Zahler comes the black-as-night humour,
    and the curious ability to make us care about someone we'd cross the street
    to avoid in real life. As anti-heroes go, Bekzat is one of the most immoral
    to ever grace the screen, and while I wouldn't go so far as to say he earns
    a redemption, Ariana's probing does gradually get under his skin, leading to
    him turning the tables, Wild Bunch style, on his oppressors in
    the final act. There's something of the relationship between Clint
    Eastwood's gunfighter and Shirley MacLaine's nun in
    Two Mules for Sister Sara to be found in that of Bekzat and
    Ariana.

  With immaculately framed widescreen imagery that often recalls Sergio
    Leone, A Dark, Dark Man plays out like a Film Noir
    transplanted to a western setting. It's the sort of movie the McDonagh
    brothers have been trying and failing to make their whole careers. Unlike
    Martin and John Michael, Yerzhanov has found a way to balance his
    story's nihilism with a rich vein of humour. It works equally as a gritty
    crime thriller, a takedown of Kazakh corruption, and a laugh out loud comedy
    about a man who just wants to get out of his work clothes by six
    o'clock.
    
