Nefarious [18] | Award-winning, critically-acclaimed, British thriller
Written, produced, edited and directed by Michael O'Bernicia and set in nineties London, Amsterdam and the north east of England, the film stars Danish legend Kim Bodnia, Conor Woodman, Spek, Tygo Gernandt, Alwien Tulner, Guy Porritt, Sharon Percy, Johnny Melville, Kenan Raven, Willy Van Der Griendt and Antonie Kamerling.
Nefarious [2024] | Dir. Michael O'Bernicia | UK / Holland
Cast: Kim Bodnia | 84 mins | IMDB: 7.2 stars
A-FP Rating:
CRITICAL REVIEW
"Michael O'Bernicia's Nefarious arrives two decades after its capture on digital video, emerging from the vaults like a time capsule of pre-financial crisis anxieties. Shot for £17,000 across seventeen non-consecutive days in 2005, this Anglo-Dutch road thriller transforms budgetary constraint into visual poetry. The grain of early digital video, once a limitation, now functions as aesthetic armor, lending the proceedings a documentary urgency that recalls the Dogme 95 movement while anticipating Nicolas Winding Refn's neon-noir sensibilities.
At its center, Kim Bodnia—stepping into shoes originally fitted for Christopher Walken—delivers a masterclass in criminal ennui as Michael Elkiar, Europe's premier cocaine importer facing existential dissolution. Bodnia inverts hisPushermenace into something more insidious: bourgeois malaise. His Elkiar is Camus's Meursault reimagined as a suburban drug lord, mechanically maintaining empire while his soul quietly hemorrhages. The parallel narrative of small-time dealers Lez and Billy (Conor Woodman and Spek) functions as both cautionary tale and nostalgic elegy, their Amsterdam coffeeshop dreams spiraling into hallucinogenic tragedy that mirrors Elkiar's domestic collapse.
O'Bernicia's screenplay excavates drug prohibition's hypocrisies with surgical precision, constructing a universe where karma operates as inexorably as market forces. The handheld Amsterdam sequences evokeRun Lola Run's anarchic energy filtered through Antonioni's existential dread, while the climactic showdown at Cowgreen Reservoir transforms British countryside into Greek tragedy. What elevates this beyond genre exercise is its profound empathy for characters trapped within systems of their own making—Elkiar's marital crisis unfolds with Bergmanesque devastation while Lez and Billy's doomed friendship channelsWithnail and Ifor the MDMA generation.
The film's treatment of masculinity feels particularly prescient: men undone not by external forces but by emotional inarticulacy, finding expression only through violence and intoxication. O'Bernicia stages their unraveling with the tonal complexity of Mike Hodges'sGet Carter, mixing dark comedy with genuine pathos. The remastered soundtrack adds temporal vertigo, its contemporary landscape clashing productively with mid-2000s digital aesthetics to create a dreamlike meditation on time's circular nature.
Nefarious emerges as that rarest creature: genuinely independent cinema using limitation as liberation. Its twenty-year gestation has transformed zeitgeist capture into universal meditation—a Sisyphean exploration of survival's price in a world where everything, including redemption, is commodified. The final image, pregnant with dramatic irony, suggests there are no clean exits in the economy of crime, only varying degrees of collateral damage. O'Bernicia has delivered a retro-cult classic that feels both utterly of its time and urgently contemporary."
Review Nefarious [2024] SVOD.