BIG BAD WOLVES (2013).

Editor’s Note: This was originally published for FANGORIA on April 22, 2013, and we’re proud to share it as part of The Gingold Files.

Two years ago, Israeli writer/directors Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado provided an out-of-nowhere highlight of the Tribeca Film Festival with Rabies, their multiple-twisty variation on killer-in-the-woods standards. Now theyโ€™re back at the fest with the world premiere of Big Bad Wolves, which isnโ€™t quite as narratively knotty but proves the duo equally adept at a more brute-forceful brand of thriller.

The first act of Big Bad Wolves does approach a similar level of complexity, following a marvelous slow-motion opening scene backed by Frank Ilfmanโ€™s menacing string-heavy score. This prologue skillfully sets up the scenarioโ€”someone is abducting and doing terrible things to little girlsโ€”before we meet the storyโ€™s key players. Thereโ€™s Miki (spelled โ€œMickeyโ€ in the subtitles, played by Rabiesโ€™ Lior Ashkenazi), the detective investigating the murders; Dror (Rotem Keinan), a religious-studies teacher whom circumstantial evidence has made the only potential culprit; and Gidi (Tzahi Grad), the distraught father of one of the young victims. That childโ€™s body is discovered in a scene that pays tribute to Keshales and Papushadoโ€™s horrifying powers of suggestion, which contrasts effectively with Mikiโ€™s more bluntly brutal methods of getting confessions out of suspects like Dror.

Unfortunately, a kid with a camcorder captures this interrogation and posts it on โ€œVid2Cool,โ€ which gets Miki kicked off the force and Drorโ€”whose guilt is hardly a givenโ€”dismissed from his job. As if Drorโ€™s day canโ€™t get bad enough, Miki has decided (with a bit of encouragement from his captain) to stay on Drorโ€™s case, and he grabs Dror after a tense, well-staged foot-and-bicycle chase for another round of โ€œquestioning.โ€ Thatโ€™s when Gidi intervenes, intending to get the confession that he believes the police are incapable of extracting. Maniacs like this, according to Gidi, arenโ€™t afraid of the cops; โ€œManiacs are afraid of maniacs,โ€ he says, which sets the tone for the action to follow.

Once the elaborate but cleanly presented setup is out of the way, Keshales and Papushado narrow the focus down to the unpleasant yet riveting events that transpire at Gidiโ€™s remote house. Hereโ€™s where they really tighten the screwsโ€”not literally, though thatโ€™s about the only kind of hardware Gidi doesnโ€™t apply to Dror in an attempt to get him to talk. Driven around the bend by grief, Gidi nonetheless maintains his composure throughout his interrogations, and Gradโ€™s enactment of this deadpan avenger is Big Bad Wolvesโ€™ spellbinding center; his just-the-facts recitation of the sickening fates his daughter and the other girls suffered (the fact that their heads have never been found is far from the worst part) is more powerful than any onscreen forensic evidence would have been. What he does to Dror, on the other hand (and foot), is presented in sometimes excruciating detail that dares you to keep watching.

Dror, of course, protests his innocence and is pretty convincing about it, and part of Big Bad Wolvesโ€™ mounting tension lies in not knowing for sure whether he really committed the atrocities or not, and thus deserves what Gidi is dishing out. Miki, meanwhile, gradually becomes the filmโ€™s moral center, questioning his own early certainties; the fact that both he and Dror have young daughters of their own with wives from whom theyโ€™re currently estranged is a perfect, resonant touch. It also adds weight to Drorโ€™s argument: Could a man with a child like Gidiโ€™s possibly commit such horrible acts upon another?

The filmmakers adroitly withhold the answer to that question right up until the chilling final frames, and thereโ€™s more along the way than did-he-or-didnโ€™t-he suspense, and horror at the lengths Gidi will go to force the truth. Keshales and Papushado also lace the scenario with a streak of jet-black humor via sneaky details (โ€œRide of the Valkyriesโ€ as one characterโ€™s ringtone) and a few supporting characters who happen upon or are happened upon by Gidi and Miki. Occasionally, that comedy has a political tinge as well, as when Gidiโ€™s father (Dov Glickman) gets involved, though itโ€™s no fair revealing exactly how. Suffice to say that Keshales and Papushado combine the many flavors in Big Bad Wolvesโ€™ recipe into one hearty, bloody dish that will be eagerly devoured by anyone seeking an intense, engrossing viewing experience. With just two films, theyโ€™ve established themselves as major talents on the international genre scene, and I canโ€™t wait to see how their third feature will further advance their craft.

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