Kino Lorber: Suspect Zero (2004) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of Kino Lorber and Paramount Pictures

The brilliant filmmaking career of Edmund Elias Merhige aka E. Elias Merhige is sadly as well as inexplicably short lived in the annals of visionary experimental sensory excesses.  Starting in 1989 with his years-in-the-making student performance art film Begotten before landing work with Nicolas Cage’s production of Shadow of the Vampire in the year 2000 featuring an Oscar nominated performance by Willem Dafoe opposite John Malkovich, things looked promising for the gothic horror infused indie darling.  Characterized by flickering grainy images of an almost spiritual metaphysical manifest where the film itself is like a Pentecostal text, Merhige quickly established himself as a formidable as well as intellectually provocative audiovisual artist. 
 
And then came his third feature Suspect Zero in 2004, a surreal crime detective thriller of sorts with leanings towards ESP ability or more specifically ‘remote viewing’ starring Ben Kingsley, Aaron Eckhart and Carrie-Anne Moss.  Despite being a sizable project featuring star power, a screenplay by new hotshot Hollywood writer Zak Penn, cinematography by the legendary Michael Chapman and pulsating brooding score by Clint Mansell, the film was a huge failure with mixed to middling reviews and Merhige’s career seemed to screech to a halt with it.  Rumor has it Tom Cruise was debating starring in this project spoken of the same breath as Vanilla Sky by way of Se7en but he chose Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut over it, a career move that seems to have dodged a bullet.

 
Years later, thanks to the efforts of Kino Lorber who have given the film a new 4K scan of the original 35mm camera negative and an HDR/Dolby Vision passthrough and the generous participation of the film’s mercurial director, filmgoers now have a chance to take a look at one of the strangest, most audacious if not shakily landed serial killer thrillers of the 2000s as well as track one of the most extraordinary filmmakers of the late 1980s and onward on his way to petering out.  Included on the disc are an audio commentary by the director, an archival four-part featurette, a ‘remote viewing’ demonstration and an unused ending with optional director commentary.

 
Following tormented FBI agent Thomas Mackelway (Aaron Eckhart) who is tasked with investigating a string of strange murders with his former partner Frank Kulok (Carrie-Anne Moss), his trail brings him to a character named Benjamin O’Ryan (Ben Kingsley) who claims to have taken part in a secret program that enables ‘remote viewing’ or telepathically transmitted images from the mind of a serial killer in the act of a crime.  It’s a screwy concept that doesn’t always work but the actors do their best to sell it with Kingsley looking ominous and threatening ala Sexy Beast while director Merhige ratchets up the psychedelia and black-and-white grainy montages.  The film itself feels somewhere between the aforementioned Se7en with oddly gothic overtones from Richard Stanley’s Dust Devil while also being a precognitive psychological thriller with hints of Minority Report and Zodiac peppered in. 

 
Supposedly loosely based on a real 1978 Fort Meade, Maryland project called The Stargate Project involving investigating the possibility of ‘remote viewing’ for military applications, Suspect Zero is even for an already eccentric filmmaker a truly really very weird Hollywood thriller.  Conceptually dealing in familiar terrain but with a twist that threatens to undermine everything that came before, its an ambitious project that perhaps bites off more than it can chew despite maintaining a thoroughly bleak overtone.  Ending up as something closer to, say, The Empty Man than The Silence of the Lambs, Suspect Zero while well intentioned seems to self-terminate as it nears inconclusion. 

 
While an interesting footnote in the director’s career with an otherwise solid cast that’s never boring, it is indeed kind of sad to see such a promising wholly original filmmaker’s career end up here.  Nevertheless, the Kino Lorber disc release is solid for Merhige fans keen on eating up everything on his plate.  Fingers crossed this means Kino will work out a deal to release both Begotten and Shadow of the Vampire due proper.  In any case, maybe the weirdest major Hollywood film of the 2000s nobody saw let alone talked about, a shame considering it is from one of the most talked about directors of the new millennia. 

--Andrew Kotwicki